Abiotic Stress in Crop Production
TL;DR: In this article , the authors focus on current findings in plant resistance to four cardinal abiotic stressors (drought, heat, salinity, and low temperatures) and focus on the importance of primary and secondary metabolites, including carbohydrates, amino acids, phenolics, and phytohormones.
read more
Abstract: The vast majority of agricultural land undergoes abiotic stress that can significantly reduce agricultural yields. Understanding the mechanisms of plant defenses against stresses and putting this knowledge into practice is, therefore, an integral part of sustainable agriculture. In this review, we focus on current findings in plant resistance to four cardinal abiotic stressors—drought, heat, salinity, and low temperatures. Apart from the description of the newly discovered mechanisms of signaling and resistance to abiotic stress, this review also focuses on the importance of primary and secondary metabolites, including carbohydrates, amino acids, phenolics, and phytohormones. A meta-analysis of transcriptomic studies concerning the model plant Arabidopsis demonstrates the long-observed phenomenon that abiotic stressors induce different signals and effects at the level of gene expression, but genes whose regulation is similar under most stressors can still be traced. The analysis further reveals the transcriptional modulation of Golgi-targeted proteins in response to heat stress. Our analysis also highlights several genes that are similarly regulated under all stress conditions. These genes support the central role of phytohormones in the abiotic stress response, and the importance of some of these in plant resistance has not yet been studied. Finally, this review provides information about the response to abiotic stress in major European crop plants—wheat, sugar beet, maize, potatoes, barley, sunflowers, grapes, rapeseed, tomatoes, and apples.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Early-Stage Detection of Biotic and Abiotic Stress on Plants by Chlorophyll Fluorescence Imaging Analysis
TL;DR: Chlorophyll a fluorescence imaging analysis enables early-stage detection of biotic and abiotic stress in plants, allowing for high-throughput assessment and pre-symptomatic monitoring of plant physiological status, with potential for rapid, non-invasive, and low-cost stress detection.
46
Plant hormones and secondary metabolites under environmental stresses: Shedding light on defense molecules
S.Krishna Kumari,Faroza Nazir,Chirag Maheshwari,Harmanjit Kaur,Ravi Gupta,Kadambot H. M. Siddique,M. I. R. Khan +6 more
- 01 Nov 2023
TL;DR: This review explores SMs-mediated plant defense responses and highlights the crosstalk between PGRs and SMs under diverse environmental stressors, and genetic engineering approaches are discussed as a potential revenue to enhance plant hormone-mediated SM production in response to environmental cues.
24
A review on ethnopharmacology, phytochemistry, pharmacology and potential uses of Portulaca oleracea L.
Tianshuang Xia,Yiping Jiang,Nani Wang,Liyong Lai,Shengyan Xu,Xiaoqiang Yue,Hailiang Xin +6 more
TL;DR: Based on traditional usage, phytochemicals, and pharmacological activity, PO is a potential medicinal and edible plant with diverse pharmacological effects and may have vast application potential in the food and pharmaceutical industries and animal husbandry.
21
Plant breeding for harmony between sustainable agriculture, the environment, and global food security: an era of genomics‐assisted breeding
A. Hafeez,Baber Ali,Muhammad Ammar Javed,Aroona Saleem,Mahreen Fatima,Amin Fathi,Muhammad Siddique Afridi,Veysel Aydin,Mükerrem Atalay Oral,Fathia A. Soudy +9 more
15
Genome-wide analysis of UDP-glycosyltransferase gene family and identification of a flavonoid 7-O-UGT (AhUGT75A) enhancing abiotic stress in peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.)
Ouyang Lei,Yue Liu,Ruonan Yao,Dongli He,Liying Yan,Yuning Chen,Dongxin Huai,Zhihui Wang,Bolun Yu,Yanping Kang,Huifang Jiang,Yong Lei,Boshou Liao,Xin Wang +13 more
TL;DR: This research not only provides valuable information for functional characterization of UGTs in peanut, but also gives new insights into potential applications in breeding new cultivars with both desirable stress tolerance and health benefits.
14
References
BR deficiency causes increased sensitivity to drought and yield penalty in cotton.
TL;DR: It is suggested that BRs may modulate the drought tolerance of cotton by regulating much genes that related to drought stress and multiple organ responses to drought, including root growth, stomata development, theStomata aperture and photosynthesis.
Strigolactone is involved in nitric oxide-enhanced the salt resistance in tomato seedlings
Huwei Liu,Changxia Li,Mei Yan,Zongxi Zhao,Panpan Huang,Lijuan Wei,Xuetong Wu,Chunlei Wang,Weibiao Liao +8 more
TL;DR: SLs may play an important role in NO-enhanced salinity tolerance in tomato seedlings by increasing photosynthetic pigment content, enhancing antioxidant capacity and improving endogenous SLs synthesis.
Structural and functional characterisation of two novel durum wheat annexin genes in response to abiotic stress.
TL;DR: Gene expression patterns obtained by real-time PCR revealed differential temporal and spatial regulation of the two annexin genes in durum wheat under different abiotic stress conditions, suggesting annexin's involvement in theses stress tolerance mechanisms.
ZmHsf05, a new heat shock transcription factor from Zea mays L. improves thermotolerance in Arabidopsis thaliana and rescues thermotolerance defects of the athsfa2 mutant.
Guoliang Li,Hua-ning Zhang,Hongbo Shao,Gui-yan Wang,Yuanyuan Zhang,Yujie Zhang,Li-na Zhao,Xiulin Guo,Mohamed S. Sheteiwy +8 more
TL;DR: The results suggested that ZmHsf05 plays an important role in both basal and acquired thermotolerance in plants.
Wheat heat shock factor TaHsfA2d contributes to plant responses to phosphate deficiency.
Yue-Ling Zhao,Jingnan Miao,Jinqiu He,X. Cindy Tian,Kaili Gao,Chao Ma,Xiubin Tian,Wenqiang Men,Huanhuan Li,Huihui Bi,Wenxuan Liu +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors identified that TaHsfA2d, a member of the heat shock factor family, was strongly repressed by Pi deficiency and showed that over-expansions of this gene resulted in increased anthocyanin content, decreased proliferation and elongation of lateral roots, and reduced Pi uptake.