Accepted Manuscript Title: To grow or not to grow: A stressful decision for plants Author: Rudy Dolferus PII: DOI: Reference:
S0168-9452(14)00243-X http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1016/j.plantsci.2014.10.002 PSL 9061
To appear in:
Plant Science
Received date: Revised date: Accepted date:
4-9-2014 6-10-2014 9-10-2014
Please cite this article as: R. Dolferus, To grow or not to grow: a stressful decision for plants, Plant Science (2014), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.plantsci.2014.10.002 This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.
1 1 2 3
Review:
ip t
4 5
To grow or not to grow: a stressful decision for plants
cr
6
us
7 8
an
9 10
12
M
11 Rudy Dolferus
14 CSIRO
16
Agriculture Flagship
17 18 19 20 21
Ac ce p
15
te
d
13
GPO Box 1600
Canberra ACT 2601 Australia
Tel: +61-2-62465010
E-mail:
[email protected]
22
Page 1 of 65
2 22
Contents
24 25 26
Abstract ..................................................................................................3 1. Introduction .......................................................................................4
27
1.2. Plant growth and the environment ......................................................................5
28
1.3. Can we exploit plant adaptive capacity?.............................................................6
29
1.4. The virtue of model plants ..................................................................................7
30
1.5. Are domesticated plants different? .....................................................................8
31 32
2. Genetic approaches for improving abiotic stress tolerance.............9
33
2.2. Avoidance and escape reactions .......................................................................10
34
2.3. Constitutive vs. inducible stress tolerance ........................................................11
35
2.4. QTL analysis in the genomics era.....................................................................15
36
2.5. Next generation phenotyping methods .............................................................16
37 38
3. Components of abiotic stress responses ..........................................17
39
3.2. First things first: establishment of cellular protection ......................................19
40
3.3. Taking care of metabolic adjustment................................................................20
41
3.4. Do abiotic stress response pathways overlap? ..................................................22
42
3.5. Selection for tolerance to multiple abiotic stresses...........................................23
44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54
us
cr
1.1. Abiotic stresses: definition and impact on agriculture........................................4
M
an
2.1. Field or controlled environment phenotyping?...................................................9
te
d
3.1. The power of transcriptomics ...........................................................................17
Ac ce p
43
ip t
23
3.6. Transgenic approaches for abiotic stress tolerance...........................................25
4. Coordination of growth responses to abiotic stress........................27 4.1. Do plants have brains? ......................................................................................27 4.2. Growth inhibition responses .............................................................................28 4.3. Growth stimulation responses...........................................................................30 4.4. An old legend born again: auxins .....................................................................32 4.5. Coordination of environmental responses ........................................................33
5. Conclusions.......................................................................................35 Acknowledgements ..............................................................................37 References ............................................................................................38 Figure Legends.....................................................................................59
55
Page 2 of 65
3 55
Abstract
57
Progress in improving abiotic stress tolerance of crop plants using classic breeding
58
and selection approaches has been slow. This has generally been blamed on the lack
59
of reliable traits and phenotyping methods for stress tolerance. In crops, abiotic stress
60
tolerance is most often measured in terms of yield-capacity under adverse weather
61
conditions. “Yield” is a complex trait and is determined by growth and developmental
62
processes which are controlled by environmental signals throughout the light cycle of
63
the plant. The use of model systems has allowed us to gradually unravel how plants
64
grow and develop, but our understanding of the flexibility and opportunistic nature of
65
plant development and its capacity to adapt growth to environmental cues is still
66
evolving. There is genetic variability for the capacity to maintain yield and
67
productivity under abiotic stress conditions in crop plants such as cereals.
68
Technological progress in various domains has made it increasingly possible to mine
69
that genetic variability and develop a better understanding about the basic mechanism
74
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
ip t
56
75
human nutrition, the cereals.
70 71 72 73
of plant growth and abiotic stress tolerance. The aim of this paper is not to give a detailed account of all current research progress, but instead to highlight some of the current research trends that may ultimately lead to strategies for stress-proofing crop species. The focus will be on abiotic stresses that are most often associated with climate change (drought, heat and cold) and those crops that are most important for
76 77
Keywords:
78
Abiotic stress/plant development/senescence/hormone regulation/cereals/crop yield
Page 3 of 65
4 79
1. Introduction
81
1.1. Abiotic stresses: definition and impact on agriculture
82
Plants are immobile and depend on their environment for growth and development.
83
This environment is variable and challenges plants with abiotic stress situations
84
throughout their life cycle: light (quality and quantity), mineral nutrition (depletion
85
and toxicity, salinity), temperature (heat, cold) and water availability (drought,
86
flooding). Plant development is therefore flexible and adjustable to the environment.
87
During evolution, wild plant species have learned to adapt to their natural
88
environment and this has determined their geographical distribution. In agricultural
89
environments, crop productivity is usually well controlled by agronomical practices,
90
but crop losses due to extreme and unexpected weather events are unavoidable. The
91
prospect of having to meet food demands for a 34% increase of the global population
92
by 2050 is imminent [1]. Crop yields will need boosting, but the higher frequency and
93
intensity of drought, heat and cold spells will also require crops that are better able to
98
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
ip t
80
99
therefore be based on a thorough understanding of the complexity of plant growth and
94 95 96 97
maintain productivity under sub-optimal conditions. The concept of “tolerance” and “sensitivity” of plants to abiotic stress situations can be difficult to measure. In model plants like Arabidopsis, tolerance is often measured as “survival”. In crop species like cereals maintenance of “yield” and “productivity” is for economical reasons more important than “survival”. The criteria to evaluate stress tolerance in crop plants must
100
developmental processes that ultimately correlate with maintenance of productivity.
101
Unfortunately, this knowledge is still evolving.
102
Page 4 of 65
5 Progress in cereal yield improvements has generally been slow and is starting to reach
104
a plateau, falling short of the annual yield increases required to meet 2050 food
105
demands [2]. In rice and wheat it is estimated that annual rate of yield increase has so
106
far been primarily achieved through improved managing practices (mechanisation)
107
rather than through breeding and genetic gain [3, 4]. During the last decade significant
108
progress has been made in improving our understanding about plant physiology and
109
molecular biology and new technologies have placed us now in a better position to
110
improve the efficiency of crop breeding. Improved knowledge and advanced new
111
technologies may now provide us with an opportunity to improve the speed and
112
efficiency of breeding to boost crop yield and abiotic stress tolerance.
an
us
cr
ip t
103
M
113
1.2. Plant growth and the environment
115
Plants continuously adjust growth and development, growing prolifically when
116
conditions are optimal and slowing down, arresting and even reversing growth (e.g.
117
abscission, senescence and cell death responses) under sub-optimal conditions - even
122
Ac ce p
te
d
114
123
is therefore not surprising that crop productivity attributes (yield, quality) are strongly
124
influenced by environmental variability (gene-environment interactions, GxE).
125
Consequently, the responsiveness of crop plants to abiotic stresses is equally variable
126
and is controlled by complex gene networks with epistatic interactions [5]. In the
127
field, crop plants are continuously challenged by a combination of stresses which are
118 119 120 121
when conditions are not life-threatening. This bidirectional growth adjustment mechanism is quite remarkable and poorly understood, but it may hold the key for improving abiotic stress tolerance. Plant growth is a measure of environmental input and adaptive capacity to a particular environment; some conditions can be controlled by humans (irrigation, fertilization etc.), but others are at the mercy of the weather. It
Page 5 of 65
6 often typical for that environment. Breeding activities are usually focused on specific
129
target environments, but this approach tends to improve adaptive traits that are
130
constitutively present and are relevant for that environment only. This approach may
131
have resulted in the loss of genetic variation from current breeding stock that would
132
allow the plant to maintain productivity under unexpected and/or more extreme stress
133
conditions. To identify germplasm that is better able to maintain productivity under
134
more challenging abiotic stress conditions, it will be necessary to increase the
135
selection standards and identify germplasm that is able to perform well under stress
136
conditions.
an
us
cr
ip t
128
137
1.3. Can we exploit plant adaptive capacity?
139
Plants in general (higher and lower plants) have a staggering capacity to adapt to
140
extreme environments and they can be found in most ecosystems of the globe. Some
141
grasses and flowering plants can be found on the Antarctic Peninsula [6], resurrection
142
plants are adapted to extremely hot and dry conditions [7, 8], while seagrasses are
147
Ac ce p
te
d
M
138
148
stress signalling and metabolic and developmental adaption mechanisms [8, 10].
149
Proof-of-concept transgenic approaches can be used to evaluate some of these
150
adaptation mechanisms (e.g., cryo- and osmo-protectants) in crop species such as
151
cereals. However, this may be difficult to achieve if genes of an entire metabolic
152
pathway need to be transferred and it may also compromise important yield and
143 144 145 146
land plants that have re-adapted to life in a marine environment, surviving conditions of low light, high salt and anoxia in the sediment [9]. Adaptation of plants to extreme environments requires complex morphological, developmental and metabolic adaptations. Exploring the molecular mechanisms of drought tolerance in resurrection plants and salt tolerance of halophytes has benefited our understanding about abiotic
Page 6 of 65
7 quality traits. Important morphological and developmental components that contribute
154
to abiotic stress tolerance simply cannot be transferred to cereals. Sourcing abiotic
155
stress tolerance traits from the available genetic variability in crop species, landraces
156
and progenitor species may be a more desirable approach.
ip t
153
157
1.4. The virtue of model plants
159
A small genome size has been an important criterion for the selection of model plants.
160
The simple dicot Arabidopsis has been a workhorse for advancing our understanding
161
of various plant biological processes, including plant development and response to
162
various abiotic stresses. Comparative genomics is starting to reveal important
163
differences between different model systems, suggesting that care is needed when
164
extrapolating information from model systems to other plants. For example, some
165
genes are missing in Arabidopsis that are present in other plants [11], while other
166
genes have diverged and evolved different functions in other plants. The control of
167
flowering and flower development differs considerably between eudicots
172
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
158
173
has become faster and cheaper, which has made it possible to sequence larger plant
174
genomes. In addition to the rice genome, the genome sequences of four other
175
cultivated grasses (maize, sorghum, barley and wheat; www.gramene.org) and one
176
wild grass (Brachypodium; www.brachypodium.org) are now available, providing a
177
wealth of information for comparative genomics studies into the evolution of these
168 169 170 171
(Arabidopsis) and monocots (rice, Brachypodium), even though the regulatory genes (e.g. MADS-box genes) identified in Arabidopsis are also present in monocots [1214]. In addition, it has been shown plants that many of the proteins with completely unknown function (POFs; proteins with obscure features) are species-specific and have no homologues in other species [15, 16]. In recent times, sequencing technology
Page 7 of 65
8 178
genomes (synteny, gene loss/conservation, gene divergence). This unstoppable
179
progress in sequencing technologies and genomics will ultimately reduce the reliance
180
on model systems.
ip t
181
1.5. Are domesticated plants different?
183
Domestication has turned wild ancestor varieties into cultivated crops that have a
184
different architecture and look vastly different from their progenitor species (e.g., rice:
185
Fig. 1). Selection for desirable traits has affected many plant developmental
186
processes, including yield-related traits (seed size and number), seed shattering, seed
187
dormancy, photoperiod and flowering time, palatability and overall shape and body
188
architecture [17, 18]. Comparative genomics is slowly revealing the effect of
189
domestication at the DNA level [19]. Comparison of the wild rice (Oryza rufipogon)
190
and cultivated rice (O. sativa japonica) genome sequences reveals significant gene
191
loss in the cultivated species [20]. A comparison between domesticated and wild
192
tomato revealed genes that underwent positive selection and many genes that showed
197
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
182
198
ancestor plants and landraces are often more tolerant to abiotic stresses and this
199
genetic variability could be re-introduced in domesticated crops. This process has
200
started for cereals such as rice [23] and maize [24] using wide crosses between
201
progenitors and interbreeding relatives. In bread wheat, the reconstruction of synthetic
202
hexaploids from the respective wild ancestors aims to achieve a similar goal [25].
193 194 195 196
shifts in gene expression levels [21]. Some gene deletions, mutations and variation in gene expression may have directly or indirectly affected abiotic stress tolerance. In beans, two DREB2 loci (dehydration-responsive element binding transcription factor) shared high levels of sequence diversity in one bean locus but no variation in the other, suggesting that domestication may have affected one of these genes [22]. Wild
Page 8 of 65
9 This process can be complicated by the lack of molecular markers for precision
204
breeding and the possible introduction of undesirable traits. These problems will be
205
discussed in more detail in the following chapter. Comparative genomics could also
206
be used to compare adaptation of crop species to abiotic stresses in different
207
environments and to compare genetic variability in stress tolerance [26]. The
208
difference in growth responses to environmental conditions can also reside in more
209
subtle changes in gene functions (e.g., base pair substitutions). Identifying those
210
differences will take additional effort.
us
cr
ip t
203
an
211
2. Genetic approaches for improving abiotic stress tolerance
213
2.1. Field or controlled environment phenotyping?
214
Controlled environments allow control over occurrence and timing of a stress during
215
plant development, as well as its duration and severity. It is also possible to
216
investigate the effect of a single abiotic stress at a time. This is a significant advantage
217
over field studies, where environmental conditions are typically variable and
219 220 221
d
te
Ac ce p
218
M
212
unpredictable. However, field environments remain difficult to simulate in growth chambers, even though technology is improving [27]. Air humidity, variation of light quantity and quality throughout the day (blue and red light enrichments at sunrise and sunset, respectively) control important plant physiological processes, yet are often
222
ignored in controlled environments. Additionally, heat load caused by light bulbs can
223
sometimes cause heat stress problems [28, 29] and soil drought and frost events are
224
extremely hard to simulate in controlled environments. In the field, environmental
225
changes that cause stress in plants most often occur over several hours (in the case of
226
heat during the day or frosts overnight) or even over several days (in the case of
Page 9 of 65
10 drought). These gradual changes are difficult to replicate in controlled environments
228
and stresses are often imposed abruptly, causing a shock situation by not allowing the
229
plant to gradually adapt to the stress. Additionally, growing plants in pots that are too
230
small affects root development, which in the case of drought stress affects the severity
231
and the speed with which the stress is imposed [30, 31]. Despite these issues,
232
controlled environments are the only tool that allows the comparison between
233
different stress responses independently and when used with due care and reasonable
234
attention, they can help to analyse stress responses in terms of sensitivity of different
235
plant developmental stages and effect of treatment duration and severity. This is very
236
important for designing phenotyping methods and to make sure that lines with
237
different flowering times are stressed at the same developmental stage when
238
comparing different lines. Communication with breeders and farmers can identify
239
germplasm that performs better/worse in field stress conditions and this material can
240
then provide an excellent benchmark to establish “realistic” stress treatment
241
conditions that give identical rankings in growth chambers. It is equally important to
242
replicate controlled environment results under field conditions.
246
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
ip t
227
247
flowering time [32, 33]. This is particularly troublesome when screening large
248
populations that segregate for flowering time genes. Flowering time is important for
249
optimizing grain yield in wheat, as flowering too early can result in cold and frost
250
damage and late flowering can result in poor yields due to drought and heat stress [34,
251
35]. Manipulating flowering time can also have adverse effects on yield; early-
243 244 245
2.2. Avoidance and escape reactions Selecting germplasm that is tolerant to abiotic stress under field conditions is compromised by escape or avoidance responses. In wheat, the damage caused by terminal drought can be alleviated by escaping drought through alteration of
Page 10 of 65
11 maturing varieties have less chance to accumulate biomass compared to late maturing
253
varieties, which indirectly affects grain yield in wheat [36]. Plants can also avoid
254
stress damage by adapting metabolic activity and growth rate. Accelerated growth
255
requires faster metabolism and mobilization of resources, while slowing down
256
metabolism and growth saves vital resources for passive survival of abiotic stress
257
conditions. Plants can use any of these tactics for survival in a particular environment.
258
In rice, ethylene response transcription factors (ERF) play an important role in
259
flooding tolerance [37, 38]. The ERF genes SNORKEL1 and 2 are important in deep-
260
water rice varieties, where elongation growth and outgrowing rising water levels
261
(escape response) is important for longer-term survival and grain production. In
262
contrast, another ERF-family member, SUBMERGENCE-1A (SUB1A), is important
263
in rice varieties that have to survive occasional short-term submergence and flooding
264
by transiently keeping growth and metabolic activity quiescent. Analysis of the
265
molecular basis indicates that the plant hormone ethylene plays an important role in
266
regulating elongation growth under stress conditions. The example of flooding
267
tolerance in rice illustrates the importance of regulating plant growth rate and
272
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
ip t
252
273
2.3. Constitutive vs. inducible stress tolerance
274
Selection for yield-related traits in field environments has dominated crop breeding.
275
Traits such as growth vigour, biomass accumulation, harvest index (reproductive
276
biomass), stem carbohydrate levels, tiller number, plant height, water use and
268 269 270 271
metabolic activity under stress conditions. Avoidance and escape reactions generally provide protection against abiotic stress through adjustment of growth rate and developmental processes. Understanding the molecular basis of these processes is important for understanding abiotic stress tolerance.
Page 11 of 65
12 transpiration efficiency, carbon isotope discrimination and root depth are important in
278
cereal breeding. These traits, together with improved management practises, have
279
improved vegetative growth of cereal crops, resulting in higher yield and productivity
280
[32, 33, 39-41]. Interestingly, for Australian wheat the yield gain was found to be
281
proportionally higher in the driest years compared to the better years even though
282
those traits were not specifically targeting drought conditions [4]. This illustrates that
283
yield-based traits that boost vegetative growth, biomass accumulation and water use
284
efficiency generally benefit plant growth and resilience and contribute to higher yields
285
under abiotic stress conditions [3-5, 41, 42]. However, unexpected and more extreme
286
abiotic stress conditions still result in massive yield penalties, indicating that growth
287
vigour and biomass accumulation does not necessarily result in a better capacity to
288
maintain that yield potential when growth conditions during reproductive
289
development are not favourable [5]. It is clear that an additional tolerance mechanism
290
is needed to convert or maintain the yield potential generated during the vegetative
291
stage to successful reproductive development and grain productivity. Sensitivity of
292
crops to various abiotic stresses are usually associated with phenotypes that are
297
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
ip t
277
298
compromised as growth repression saves resources for later growth when conditions
299
have returned to normal [43]. Even when this occurs, yield can never be recovered
300
because it is too late in the growing season and previously established biomass and
301
productivity has been lost. In many crops, growth repression can be an exaggeration
293 294 295 296
indicative of growth arrest, generally including leaf senescence or cell death, severe tissue necrosis (e.g., frosts and salinity), stomatal closure and arrest of photosynthesis [5]. At the reproductive stage, pollen sterility and abortion of grain development are similar growth repression phenotypes that cause major yield losses in cereals. Under shorter-duration or unexpected stress periods, survival of the plant is often not
Page 12 of 65
13 or an overly sensitive response to stress conditions. There may therefore be an
303
opportunity for increasing the threshold level at which growth repression takes place
304
in response to stresses, in order to maintain growth and productivity for as long as
305
possible. Interestingly, the two flooding tolerance mechanisms described earlier for
306
rice (section 2.2: growth acceleration versus metabolic quiescence) may be more
307
widely applicable for other abiotic stresses and the molecular understanding of
308
flooding tolerance may stimulate research on other abiotic stresses. An intriguing
309
question is whether avoidance and escape strategies should also be seen as part of the
310
plants overall strategy to tolerate abiotic stresses.
an
us
cr
ip t
302
311
To identify crops that maintain growth and yield potential under adverse growth
313
conditions it is necessary to complement constitutively expressed yield traits with
314
traits that are induced and specifically expressed under stress conditions. Identifying
315
more stress-induced traits will have a positive effect for breeding stress-tolerant crops,
316
but also for improving our understanding of the underlying physiological and
317
molecular mechanism. Under stress conditions, plants require mechanisms to protect
322
Ac ce p
te
d
M
312
323
(irrigated, rain-fed, rainout shelter plots to compare water stress conditions) [44].
324
However, controlled environments offer significant advantages if precision-
325
phenotyping is required (see section 2.1). Leaf senescence is a stress-induced
326
phenotype and has received a lot of attention as a stress-induced trait. Selecting for
318 319 320 321
their cellular machinery, metabolic adaptations and their capacity to sustain growth and development (see section 3). Selection for stress-inducible traits is more difficult to achieve, considering the unpredictability of field conditions and interference of avoidance and escape reactions. Field plots can be selected to target certain abiotic stresses (drought, heat, frost) or can be artificially modified to create stress conditions
Page 13 of 65
14 delayed foliar senescence (stay-green) and maintenance of stomatal conductance,
328
transpiration and photosynthesis during stress conditions are relatively easy
329
phenotypes to score [45]. Significant improvements in drought tolerance have resulted
330
from proof-of-concept transgenic approaches manipulating cytokinin levels,
331
confirming that this trait contributes to stress tolerance [46]. Leaf rolling is another
332
distinctive and easy to score heat and drought-induced phenotype. Reduction in leaf
333
area prevents transpiration and water loss and genetic variation for leaf rolling is
334
available in wheat and rice. However, leaf rolling does not always correlate with
335
drought tolerance, suggesting that it could be an escape rather than tolerance
336
mechanism [47, 48]. Osmotic adjustment is an inducible drought adaptation
337
mechanism that maintains leaf water potential through the synthesis of osmotically
338
active substances [44, 50]. Osmotic adjustment delays leaf senescence and leaf
339
rolling, maintains stomatal conductance and turgor pressure, thereby sustaining
340
growth under drought conditions [51]. Despite its importance, osmotic adjustment has
341
so far remained a difficult trait to phenotype [52]. Many abiotic stresses cause pollen
342
sterility and loss of fertility and grain yield in cereals [53, 54]. A phenotyping method
347
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
ip t
327
348
building up a higher yield potential, stress-inducible traits are essential to sustain that
349
higher yield potential under adverse environmental conditions to maintain growth and
350
reproductive development.
343 344 345 346
for cold and drought-induced pollen sterility was established using controlled environments [55, 56] and the plant hormone abscisic acid (ABA) was shown to play a role in stress-induced pollen abortion [53, 57, 58]. Stress-inducible traits are less likely to have negative effects on productivity of crops under non-stress conditions. While yield traits that improve vegetative plant growth and development contribute to
351
Page 14 of 65
15
2.4. QTL analysis in the genomics era
353
Identifying genetic variation for abiotic stress tolerance in crops requires the tedious
354
and laborious process of establishing linkage maps using DNA-based molecular
355
markers: restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), amplified fragment
356
length polymorphism (AFLP), random amplification of polymorphic DNA (RAPD),
357
cleaved amplified polymorphic sequences (CAPS) and simple sequence repeat (SSR,
358
microsatellite) markers. In the last decade, the shift to high-throughput technologies
359
such as Diversity Arrays (DArT; [59]) and Single Nucleotide Polymorphism markers
360
(SNP; [60]) has made the construction of high density genomic maps easier. The
361
identification of SNP markers was boosted by the availability of the genome sequence
362
for many crop species. 160,000 SNPs were identified in the non-repetitive genome
363
fraction of 20 different rice varieties [61]. The availability of annotated genome
364
sequences and accurate high density SNP maps makes it easier to identify candidate
365
genes within QTL (Quantitative Trait Loci) regions [61, 62] and the lowering in
366
sequencing costs has made it possible to carry out genotyping by sequencing (GBS),
367
which further facilitates fine-mapping QTL [63]. Genome-wide association studies
369 370 371 372
cr
us
an
M
d
te
Ac ce p
368
ip t
352
(GWAS, [64]) also benefit from high density SNP maps and can be used for mapping abiotic stress tolerance loci. In wheat, the development of multi-parent advanced inter-cross populations (MAGIC) provides a powerful tool for mapping QTL [65].
Abiotic stress tolerance is typically controlled by a large number of QTL with
373
epistatic interactions and low phenotypic contribution and heritability. A
374
comprehensive overview of QTL for various abiotic stress-related traits can be
375
accessed at the Gramene and Plant Stress websites (archive.gramene.org/qtl/;
376
www.plantstress.com/files/qtls_for_ resistance.htm). Abiotic stress QTL mapping and
Page 15 of 65
16 genomic selection (GS) has so far not led to markers for routine use in marker-
378
assisted selection (MAS) for abiotic stress tolerance [41, 66, 67]. With the bottleneck
379
of genotyping removed, mapping of abiotic stress tolerance loci will depend on the
380
availability of reliable traits for phenotyping. The case of salinity tolerance in rice is a
381
good example that QTL analysis can lead to identification of candidate genes
382
provided that reliable phenotyping methods are available [68].
cr
ip t
377
us
383
2.5. Next generation phenotyping methods
385
Considering the difficulties involved in direct selection for abiotic stress tolerance in
386
field or controlled environments, shifting from “observable” to molecular or
387
secondary traits that are highly correlated with abiotic stress tolerance, may improve
388
reliability of phenotyping procedures [69]. Our understanding about the physiological
389
and molecular basis of stress responses has improved and technological progress in
390
the last decade has provided opportunities for high-throughput phenotyping.
391
Metabolomics is a promising technology that can now be used at a scale that is
396
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
384
397
used to quantitatively and qualitatively evaluate components of cellular protection.
398
Hormone measurements can be used as indicators of developmental responses in
399
sensitive and tolerant germplasm (senescence or growth). Proteomics can also be used
400
for phenotyping abiotic stress responses, but protein expression profiling can be
401
technically more challenging (e.g., resolution limits of two-dimensional
392 393 394 395
compatible with population screening and mQTL mapping. This technology was used to identify genes controlling several metabolites and quality-related traits [70-72], but can also be used to map mQTL for metabolite changes associated with abiotic stresses [73, 74]. Measuring diagnostic metabolites can be informative about the physiological state of plant tissues in response to drought, heat and cold and metabolomics can be
Page 16 of 65
17 electrophoresis and detection limits of mass spectrometry) and is harder to adapt for
403
high throughput screening [75]. The development in recent years of various digital
404
imaging technologies has added even more opportunities for phenotyping [67, 76].
405
Non-destructive imaging can measure canopy properties that contribute to biomass
406
accumulation, as well as stress-related traits (photosynthesis, transpiration and leaf
407
senescence). This technology can be applied for high-throughput screening under
408
field or controlled environments [77-79]. New generation phenotyping technologies
409
are powerful but require some knowledge about the molecular and physiological basis
410
of abiotic stress phenotypes and the questions to be addressed.
an
us
cr
ip t
402
411
3. Components of abiotic stress responses
413
3.1. The power of transcriptomics
414
While GxE interactions are considered problematic and something to avoid in plant
415
breeding, molecular biologists have used differential gene expression of stress-treated
416
versus unstressed plant material as a standard method to study abiotic stress
418 419 420 421
d
te
Ac ce p
417
M
412
responses. In the recent decade, large-scale transcriptome analyses using microarrays and more recently new generation sequencing technologies (RNA-seq) have proven to be a powerful tool for identifying genes and cellular processes that are affected by abiotic stresses [80]. A massive amount of transcriptome information for different stresses and plant species is currently available in public databases.
422 423
Transcriptome information is starting to reveal how plants respond to various abiotic
424
stresses, but the full potential is still unexplored [81]. Currently, about 40% of the
425
proteins encoded by a eukaryotic genome have an unknown function [82]. It is
Page 17 of 65
18 estimated that between 18 and 38% of the eukaryotic proteome consists of proteins
427
without any defined domain or motif [15]. Interestingly, when comparing the
428
Arabidopsis and rice proteins with totally unknown features (POFs) nearly half were
429
found to be species-specific and had no homolog in the other genome [16].
430
Obviously, identifying the function of these proteins will require species-specific
431
studies and this will be a major challenge. Finding the exact physiological function for
432
members of large gene families (e.g., transcription factors) can also be a complicated
433
and time-consuming process. In model plants such as Arabidopsis and rice, insertion
434
mutagenesis using T-DNA and transposons can be used to identify gene functions and
435
support the gene annotation process. In rice, about 60.49% of the nuclear genes have
436
been tagged with T-DNA or Tos17 transposon insertions [83], but the functional
437
characterization of these insertion mutants remains a major effort. In addition, the
438
function of some genes for which the insertion mutant phenotype is lethal cannot be
439
investigated. Another limitation is gene redundancy and lack of a clear phenotype for
440
some mutations. Over-expression and RNAi technology can also be used to reveal the
441
function of candidate genes in plants that can be transformed. Transcriptome analysis
446
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
ip t
426
447
triggering early developmental responses, are likely to be present all the time and
448
simply require activation by upstream signals (e.g., phosphorylation). Identifying
449
those genes will require more fundamental approaches, ideally using model systems
450
in the first place (e.g., using mutagenesis approaches).
442 443 444 445
needs support from other technologies to speed up the identification of unknown gene functions. A systems biology approach combining transcriptomics with proteomics and metabolomics can help this process [84, 85]. It is also important to realize that transcriptomics focuses on differentially expressed genes, while some genes that play an important role in the early stress signal perception and transduction events, or those
Page 18 of 65
19
3.2. First things first: establishment of cellular protection
452
Bacteria, yeast and animals have a general cellular stress response mechanism that
453
protects essential macromolecules (DNA, proteins and lipids) against oxidative stress
454
and removes damaged cells using a cell death response. The conservation of this
455
response in different life forms suggests that it is an ancient protection mechanism
456
against general stress situations. The minimal cellular stress response proteome
457
consists of 44 proteins with known function, including molecular chaperones (e.g.
458
heat shock proteins), various enzymes that repair DNA damage and various proteins
459
that protect against oxidative stress and reactive oxygen species (ROS), such as
460
superoxide dismutase and glutathione antioxidant defence pathway proteins [86].
an
us
cr
ip t
451
M
461
Plants also activate a cellular protection mechanism in response to various stresses.
463
Little is known about macromolecule protection in plants, but chaperone proteins (e.g.
464
heat shock proteins) are induced by all abiotic stresses and their importance is
465
illustrated by the fact that an Escherichia coli gene encoding a cold shock protein that
466
functions as RNA chaperone can significantly improve tolerance to multiple stresses
468 469 470 471
te
Ac ce p
467
d
462
(cold, drought, heat) in transgenic rice and maize [87]. The transformation of light into chemical energy during photosynthesis and the mitochondrial electron transport chain produce damaging free radicals [88]. Regulation of intracellular redox homeostasis has been shown to control important metabolic pathways such as photosynthesis [89, 90] and is also important for regulating root and leaf
472
developmental processes [91, 92]. Superoxide, hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl
473
radical production is induced in response to abiotic and biotic stresses and results in
474
activation of genes encoding ROS-detoxifying enzymes [93, 94]. Active oxygen
475
species such as hydrogen peroxide are generally considered as local and systemic
Page 19 of 65
20 signals in response to various stress situations [95, 96]. This indicates that plants may
477
have turned this early stress defence mechanism into a systemic warning signal to
478
protect different plant parts. Some oxidative stress-related genes are expressed in cells
479
associated with the vascular bundles [97], which is compatible with a systemic
480
signalling function of ROS [98-100]. Resistance to the ROS-generating herbicide
481
paraquat in Conyza bonariensis is correlated with a highly expressed constitutive
482
ROS detoxification system and cross-tolerance to environmental oxidants [101, 102].
483
Paraquat resistance in wheat and barley has been correlated with tolerance to water
484
stress and paraquat treatment has been evaluated as a screening system for abiotic
485
stress tolerance [103, 104]. Overexpression of peroxidase, catalase, superoxide
486
reductase and superoxide dismutase in transgenic plants has resulted in improved
487
tolerance to cold, drought, salinity and heat stress [105-108], while an ascorbate
488
deficient mutant in Arabidopsis caused a stress-sensitive phenotype [109]. Cellular
489
protection in plants may also function as an intracellular and systemic signal to
490
regulate developmental processes. As a stress defence mechanism it may be essential
491
for all other aspects of the stress response to function and it could therefore act as an
493 494 495
cr
us
an
M
d
te
Ac ce p
492
ip t
476
“enabling” mechanism that needs to be activated before other aspects of stress responses (biotic and abiotic) can be established (Fig. 2).
3.3. Taking care of metabolic adjustment
496
Changes in plant growth and development under abiotic stress conditions must be
497
associated with metabolic activity to provide the energy required to establish the
498
response. Firstly, the altered cellular environment requires changes in the cellular
499
machinery to be put in place; adaptations of translation initiation and protein folding
500
are commonly observed in stress-induced transcriptomes [110, 111]. Then, specially
Page 20 of 65
21 adapted metabolic proteins are induced early in the stress response (Fig. 2). Many
502
abiotic stresses shut down photosynthesis, while photosynthates are a crucial source
503
of energy. Sugars are transported from source to sink tissues via the phloem and are
504
important signals for growth and development, as well as response to various abiotic
505
stresses. Sugar signalling and metabolism are therefore tightly linked to growth
506
responses [112]. ABA regulates stomatal conductance and photosynthetic activity,
507
causing vegetative growth retardation. This has been shown to contribute to
508
vegetative stage abiotic stress tolerance, but this growth repression also has a negative
509
effect on reproductive processes [113]. Abiotic stresses repress the sucrose cleaving
510
enzyme cell wall invertase in anthers, preventing hexose supply for pollen
511
development and causing pollen sterility. ABA accumulation was shown to directly or
512
indirectly repress cell wall invertase expression. Tolerant wheat and rice germplasm
513
displayed different anther ABA homeostasis, maintaining lower ABA levels than
514
sensitive lines in response to cold and drought stress [55-57, 113]. Sugars and ABA
515
are known to regulate ethylene and senescence responses [114]. Sugars are an
516
important growth signal in plants and are therefore tightly connected with the decision
521
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
ip t
501
522
osmotic stresses such as drought, cold and salt stress and are tightly integrated with
523
signalling pathways for sugars, essential nutrients (nitrogen) and various hormones
524
[118-120]. The yeast SnRK (Sucrose non-fermenting related kinase) related protein
525
kinases KIN10 and KIN11 play a central role in coordinating sugar, stress and
517 518 519 520
to grow or repress growth and respond to abiotic stress (Fig. 2). The glycolytic enzyme hexokinase (HXK) is a cellular sugar sensor that cross-talks to several phytohormones [115]. Other cellular components involved in regulation of metabolism in plants show some similarity to yeast. The Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase (MAPK) [116, 117] and the Salt Overly Sensitive (SOS) pathways respond to
Page 21 of 65
22 developmental signals with metabolic pathways, activating gene expression via bZIP
527
transcription factors [121, 122]. The General Control Non-repressible related protein
528
kinase (GCN-2) phosphorylates translation initiation factor 2 (eIF2α) and is able to
529
sense free amino acid levels, respond to osmotic stresses and control protein synthesis
530
[123, 124]. Both SnRK1 and GCN-2 regulate nitrate reductase and nitrogen
531
metabolism [120, 121]. Further research is required to establish how this complex
532
metabolic regulation mechanism is controlled by environmental stimuli. The
533
conservation of the kinases that regulate fundamental metabolic pathways between
534
plants, yeast and animals illustrates their evolutionary importance.
an
us
cr
ip t
526
535
3.4. Do abiotic stress response pathways overlap?
537
It has been demonstrated that treatment with one abiotic stress can provide “cross-
538
tolerance” or “hardening” to other stresses, including biotic stresses [125, 126]. Pre-
539
treatment of plants with the stress hormone ABA has a similar effect [127-129]. This
540
already suggests that there must be some functional overlap in the signalling and
545
Ac ce p
te
d
M
536
546
pollen fertility, induction of osmo-protectants by drought, cold and salinity) are also
547
shared by different stresses. Communication between sink and source tissues is
548
especially important under abiotic stress conditions when growth can be limited by
549
available resources. To fully understand the impact of abiotic stresses on plant growth
541 542 543 544
response pathways of abiotic stresses. Osmotic stresses (drought, cold, salinity, heat) involve ABA and are therefore expected to share common components. Furthermore, transcriptome analyses have confirmed that early macromolecule and oxidative stress protection is recruited by most stresses and is a general stress response (Fig. 2). Some developmental and metabolic responses (e.g., growth adaptation, leaf senescence,
Page 22 of 65
23 550
it is essential to further unravel the relationships between metabolism and
551
developmental processes.
552 Due to gene redundancy, different gene copies encoding proteins with the same
554
function can be activated under different stresses, suggesting that overlap between
555
different stresses could be larger at the protein level than at the transcript level. In
556
economical terms, it seems logical that plants will share the response to the initial
557
threat and mount stress-specific responses once the general response has created the
558
environment to make this possible (Fig. 2). A shared initial stress response may not
559
require many genes and some may have so far remained undetected in differential
560
gene expression studies. Regulation at the protein level, such as targeted protein
561
degradation using the ubiquitin proteasome, is commonly used by plant hormones to
562
regulate downstream developmental signalling [130]. It is therefore possible that a
563
rather small - but critically important - part of the overlap between different abiotic
564
stress responses has so far escaped detection.
cr
us
an
M
d
te
569
Ac ce p
565
ip t
553
570
arrest is taken in this early response mechanism and it is an important factor for
571
determining productivity and abiotic stress tolerance in crops. Selection for adaptation
572
to specific environments and productivity traits has affected many developmental
573
properties and may also have modified the early response mechanism to stress (Fig.
574
2). Selection against seed dormancy may have affected homeostasis of hormones that
566 567 568
3.5. Selection for tolerance to multiple abiotic stresses Genetic diversity for abiotic stress tolerance is more likely to occur in the early response mechanism than in the stress-specific responses that depend on the initial response (Fig. 2). The decision to continue growth or induce senescence and growth
Page 23 of 65
24 play a role in stress tolerance (ABA, GA). Adaptation to seasonal conditions and
576
different environments in cereals has modified important growth processes such as
577
duration of photosynthesis, adaptation to day-length and altered rate of leaf
578
senescence, which may also have changed the interaction between plant hormones
579
(ethylene, cytokinins). The stay-green trait has therefore been thought of as a potential
580
domestication trait [45, 131]. Analysis of stay-green QTL (e.g., sorghum) could lead
581
to positional cloning and identification of new genes involved in this process [45,
582
132].
us
cr
ip t
575
an
583
In nature, frequent exposure to a combination of stresses may have selected a shared
585
genetic adaptation mechanism to those stresses. This may be the case for heat and
586
drought stress which often occur at the same time in field conditions [126, 133]. It
587
therefore makes sense to select germplasm that is tolerant to more than one abiotic
588
stress [126], especially since different abiotic stress responses may already share a
589
common initial response mechanism (Fig. 2). Germplasm that establishes the initial
590
response successfully may also be better able to establish a stress-specific response
595
Ac ce p
te
d
M
584
596
wheat lines that are tolerant to multiple abiotic stresses individually (drought, heat,
597
shading and cold). QTL mapping using this tolerant germplasm can also be used to
598
identify overlapping general stress-response QTL, as well as QTL that are specific for
599
different stresses. Obtaining high levels of abiotic stress tolerance may ultimately
591 592 593 594
(Fig. 2). However, selecting germplasm that is tolerant to more than one stress using the combination of those stresses may be difficult to achieve because of quantitative and qualitative differences in tolerance to the combination of stresses and the difficulty to choose physiologically relevant selection conditions for the combination of stresses. We are currently using a step-wise selection procedure to first identify
Page 24 of 65
25 require combining both general stress response and stress-specific QTL. However, for
601
some traits it may be difficult to obtain tolerance to a combination of stresses; some
602
traits for drought (stomata closed to prevent water loss) and heat stress (open stomata
603
to reduce leaf temperature) are mutually exclusive [126].
604
ip t
600
3.6. Transgenic approaches for abiotic stress tolerance
606
It is common practice in molecular biology to use proof-of-concept transgenic
607
approaches (over-expression, RNAi) to evaluate candidate genes for their effect on
608
abiotic stress tolerance. Many genes have indeed been shown to improve abiotic stress
609
tolerance ([134]; see Plant Stress website for a comprehensive listing:
610
www.plantstress.com/ files/abiotic-stress_gene.htm). These include transcription and
611
regulatory factors, osmo-protectants, hormone and oxidative stress-related genes,
612
molecular chaperones, transporters and various metabolic genes. Abiotic stress
613
tolerance for most of these genes was evaluated under controlled environment or
614
glasshouse conditions, using model systems such as Arabidopsis or tobacco and some
619
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
605
620
tolerance may also be a contributing factor; in model plants tolerance is usually
621
measured as survival under vegetative stage stresses, while in crops maintenance of
622
productivity during reproductive stage stresses is important [136, 137]. The choice of
623
promoter to drive transgene expression is also important. Strong constitutive
624
promoters lead to ectopic expression of a transgene, potentially causing adverse
615 616 617 618
were also evaluated in cereals (rice, wheat, barley, maize). Relatively few transgenic lines have so far made any impact for improving field abiotic stress tolerance [135]. Potential explanations are that the field environment is much harsher, transgenes only partially improve the abiotic stress response or they improve response to one stress and not a combination of stresses. Differences in evaluation criteria for abiotic stress
Page 25 of 65
26 secondary effects on crop productivity. CBF/DREB transcription factors can improve
626
osmotic stress tolerance but result in stunted growth when using constitutive
627
promoters [138]; plants look normal when a strong drought-inducible promoter is
628
used that expresses the transgene only when required [139]. The quantitative and
629
qualitative properties of the promoter driving a transgene may be particularly critical
630
in the case of transcription factors, hormone metabolic and signal transduction genes.
631
Using Arabidopsis as a model system it may be extremely difficult or impossible to
632
fully evaluate and predict potential adverse effects in crop species [139]. In the case
633
of multigene families it is often difficult to find out which gene to use for
634
transformation. For instance, only a few aquaporin gene family members are affected
635
by stress and lead to improvement of drought tolerance in transgenic plants [140]. For
636
large transcription factor families, trial and error approaches can identify which gene
637
has a positive effect on stress tolerance [141]. Some transgenic approaches may result
638
in morphologically different plants where stress phenotypes are simply delayed (e.g.,
639
smaller leaf area reduce transpiration under drought), giving transgenics an unfair
640
advantage [142]. Manipulation of cytokinin levels using a stress-induced promoter led
645
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
ip t
625
646
multiple stresses (cold, drought and heat) in field experiments [88], suggesting that
647
focusing on the manipulation of the top of the stress signalling cascade using general
648
stress responsive genes may yield positive results.
641 642 643 644
to delayed senescence and improved drought tolerance in rice under glasshouse conditions [143]. It is possible that these transgenic lines may also perform well under field drought conditions, considering the field experience with stay-green plants. Interestingly, transgenic rice and maize plants expressing an E. coli cold shock protein
that acts as RNA chaperone in cellular protection resulted in improved tolerance to
649
Page 26 of 65
27
4. Coordination of growth responses to abiotic stress
651
4.1. Do plants have brains?
652
How are the early responses to abiotic stresses orchestrated by signals from the
653
environment? Higher animals are mobile and react to stress by escaping
654
environmental challenges. The brain processes environmental signals via the central
655
nervous system and regulates this mobility and escape reaction. The flexibility of
656
plant development in response to environmental change indicates that they have an
657
efficient systemic signalling mechanism that coordinates and orchestrates the
658
response to adverse environmental conditions. The plant vascular system bears some
659
resemblance to an animal central nervous system, sparking some speculation that
660
plants have a cellular communication mechanism similar to animals [144]. Specific
661
proteins known to play a role as neurotransmitters in animals (e.g., glutamate
662
receptors, 14-3-3 proteins) are also encoded in plant genomes but they acquired
663
different functions when plants evolved into multicellular organisms. The vascular
664
system plays an important role in coordinating growth and development between the
666 667 668 669
cr
us
an
M
d
te
Ac ce p
665
ip t
650
different plant parts [145], but the signalling mechanism is vastly different to that of animals. Plants have evolved their own systemic signals to drive growth and development (Fig. 2). Being photosynthetic organisms, they use photosynthates and the capacity to produce sugars as a resource signal for growth. They also adapted reactive oxygen species as a signal for abiotic stress. Plants have evolved their own
670
hormone signals, which are totally unlike animal hormones, to signal developmental
671
and growth responses. An emerging theme in plant biology is the observation that
672
many genes involved in hormone synthesis and signalling, e.g. those involved in ABA
673
synthesis and signalling [146, 58], are expressed in vascular parenchyma cells. This
Page 27 of 65
28 allows rapid signal perception and distribution via the vascular system, similar to a
675
nervous system but at a slower pace. Environmental signals can therefore be sensed in
676
any plant part and quickly spread throughout the plant, suggesting that plants have
677
essentially obviated the need for a central nervous system. Despite its importance, the
678
signal transmitting function of the vascular system still needs to be unravelled [147].
679
Understanding of how the signals (hormones, ROS, metabolites) themselves work is
680
gradually emerging. Auxins can be transported all over the plant using directional
681
efflux carriers and long-distance transporters and tissue-specific response mechanisms
682
make it possible to mount different auxin responses in different plant parts [148].
683
These different plant parts are pre-programmed to react differently to plant hormone
684
signals, explaining how environmental signals can have different but coordinated
685
responses. Hormonal signals therefore form an important link between the
686
environment and developmental processes. Plant evolution and global diversity is
687
testimony that plants have evolved efficient systems to manage and adapt to
688
environmental challenges.
cr
us
an
M
d
te
693
Ac ce p
689
ip t
674
694
development and have been implicated in abiotic stress responses. A lot of progress
695
has been made in recent years in understanding their function. Plant hormones can be
696
growth-retarding (ABA, ethylene, jasmonic acid) or growth-promoting (auxin,
697
gibberellic acid, cytokinin). Two recently discovered plant hormones, brassinosteroids
698
[149] and strigolactones [150] act in conjunction with auxins and can be classified as
690 691 692
4.2. Growth inhibition responses The key to understanding abiotic stress tolerance resides in understanding the plant’s capacity to accelerate/maintain or repress growth. Interaction between plant hormones must play an important role in this phenomenon. Most plant hormones play a role in
Page 28 of 65
29 growth promoting hormones, while salicylic acid functions in plant defence responses
700
to pathogens [151]. The stress hormone ABA is implicated in stomatal closure and
701
regulation of plant water balance, which impairs photosynthesis and restricts growth
702
[113]. ABA levels are up-regulated in response to osmotic stresses (drought, cold,
703
salinity) and heat stress. Higher ABA levels improve stress tolerance at the vegetative
704
level, but there is a compromise at the reproductive level. QTL analysis in maize
705
indicated that lines with higher root ABA levels had lower grain yield [152] and our
706
own work demonstrated that lower ABA levels in stressed anthers was correlated with
707
better cold and drought tolerance, as well as maintenance of anther sink strength in
708
rice [58]. The ABA signalling pathway interacts with other hormones and sugar
709
signalling via the SnRK network [98, 123]. ABA’s restriction of photosynthesis and
710
photosynthate allocation to sink tissues may help in shorter periods of abiotic stress,
711
but is destructive under longer term stress conditions such as terminal drought. The
712
opposing effect of ABA on vegetative and reproductive structures indicates that it is
713
important to understand the effect of abiotic stress during plant development. The
714
success of transgenic approaches for manipulation of abiotic stress tolerance will
719
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
ip t
699
720
tapetum [153, 154]. External application and stress-induced accumulation of ABA
721
results in senescence, but the role of ABA in this process is still unclear. ABA may
722
interact with the oxidative stress response that protects against senescence [155], but
723
may also cause senescence via interaction with ethylene. The role of ethylene in
715 716 717 718
depend on carefully targeting the control of ABA homeostasis to particular tissues and growth stages.
Growth repression under abiotic stress conditions is associated with induction of leaf senescence (Fig. 3) or programmed cell death responses in tissues such as the anther
Page 29 of 65
30 inducing leaf senescence and inhibition of root elongation has been well investigated.
725
Antisense repression of ethylene biosynthesis inhibits senescence, and the limitation
726
of ethylene production has in many cases resulted in improved abiotic stress tolerance
727
[156]. Ethylene can induce the biosynthesis of the growth-promoting hormone auxin
728
in a tissue-specific manner [157]. The role of ethylene can therefore also be growth-
729
promoting; low light (etiolation) and shading conditions cause elongation growth in
730
shading-sensitive plants [158]. Ethylene is therefore in a unique position to control
731
plant developmental processes: it can act as an inhibitor of growth, but also as a
732
growth promoter (Fig. 4).
an
us
cr
ip t
724
733
Jasmonic acid can also induce senescence. In Arabidopsis, jasmonate-induced
735
senescence involves induction of the transcription factor WRKY57, which is
736
repressed by the growth hormone auxin [159]. In addition, jasmonate induces
737
expression of ICE (Inducer of CBF Expression), thereby promoting freezing tolerance
738
in Arabidopsis [160]. Ethylene and jasmonate can regulate each other’s homeostasis
739
via feedback regulation, producing a fine balance between growth repression
743
Ac ce p
te
d
M
734
744
Cytokinins counteract the effect of ethylene, preventing senescence and stimulating
745
sugar metabolism and sink strength. Over-expression of the cytokinin biosynthetic
746
gene isopentenyl transferase has been used to produce plants that show delayed
747
senescence (stay-green trait), increased biomass production and improved stress
748
tolerance [45, 131]. However, the stay-green trait is not always associated with
740 741 742
(jasmonic acid) and growth stimulation (ethylene).
4.3. Growth stimulation responses The growth hormone group of cytokinins plays a role in controlling cell division.
Page 30 of 65
31 749
increased yield and productivity [131], suggesting that increased cytokinin levels
750
benefit vegetative growth but not reproductive development.
751 Gibberellins (GA) play a crucial role in the promotion of plant elongation growth. In
753
the absence of GA, elongation growth is restrained by DELLA nuclear proteins. In the
754
presence of GA, DELLA proteins bind to the GA-GID1 receptor complex, targeting it
755
for degradation by the ubiquitin-26S proteasome and thereby activating GA signalling
756
and elongation growth [161]. Some DELLA mutants are unable to bind the GA-GID1
757
complex, causing it to escape proteasome degradation. This suppresses elongation
758
growth, causing a semi-dwarf phenotype. Other DELLA mutants abolish its
759
repression activity, resulting in a tall stature (slender); these mutants are also male
760
sterile, suggesting that DELLA proteins play a role in pollen development [162].
761
Mutations in GA biosynthesis genes and DELLA proteins with a semi-dwarf
762
phenotype increase yield in cereals and have formed the basis of the Green
763
Revolution [163]. However, some GA-insensitive dwarf mutants in wheat (reduced
764
height; Rht) also have reduced pollen viability, which has been associated with
769
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
ip t
752
770
CBF1 was shown to induce DELLA gene expression and activate GA catabolic genes,
771
causing growth repression [168, 169]. Stress-induced accumulation of ABA
772
antagonizes GA action by controlling DELLA activity [170]. In addition, DELLA
773
proteins play a role in mounting a protective response to oxidative stress [169, 171].
765 766 767 768
reduced tolerance to abiotic stresses such as heat and drought [162, 164]. Interestingly, the growth-stimulation of GA can be counteracted by environmental stresses and hormones such as ethylene and auxins, which affect the growth restraining activity of DELLA proteins [165-167]. In Arabidopsis, the CBF/DREB cold-inducible transcription factors activate cold acclimation and freezing tolerance.
Page 31 of 65
32 774
The DELLA proteins obviously form a hub of hormonal and environmental
775
interactions that determine continuation or repression of growth in function of
776
environmental cues [172].
ip t
777
4.4. An old legend born again: auxins
779
Auxins were the first plant hormone to be discovered. The growth-promoting
780
properties of auxins have gained increasing prominence in recent years because of
781
their role in regulating development and response to abiotic stress. Auxins are
782
synthesized in the shoot apical meristem and are transported to neighbouring tissues
783
and over longer distances using efflux carriers and polar transporters respectively.
784
Auxins stimulate root growth and other tissue-specific responses throughout the plant
785
such as leaf and fruit senescence [148]. In Arabidopsis this requires cross-talk with
786
jasmonic acid signalling and the transcription factor WRKY57 [161, 173, 174].
us
an
M
d
One of the oldest known effects of auxins is the control of apical dominance and
793
Ac ce p
788
te
787
cr
778
794
have a role in stamen development and are actively synthesized in the anther,
795
controlling pollen development and anther dehiscence [178]. Apical dominance may
796
play an important role in promoting reproductive development and grain yield in
797
cereals. Auxins are synthesized in the anthers towards maturity where they play a role
798
in anther senescence [178, 179]. At the start of reproductive development in cereals
789 790 791 792
shoot branching (tillering in cereals). Cutting the main stem of a plant removes the apical meristem where auxins are made, resulting in increased branching. The branching response involves interaction with strigolactone and requires adequate sugar supply to support axillary bud outgrowth [175, 176]. It has been demonstrated that auxin treatment improves fertility in heat-stressed barley plants [177]. Auxins
Page 32 of 65
33 the shoot apex where auxins are synthesized changes into a flowering meristem. It
800
then develops into a spike containing the reproductive organs. The presence of auxin
801
biosynthesis in the floral organs at this stage might signify that apical dominance is
802
controlled by the reproductive structures. This function may be essential to direct
803
resources to the reproductive structures for seed production rather than investing them
804
in further vegetative growth. Abiotic stresses in cereals cause pollen sterility in
805
sensitive lines, resulting in increased tillering after the stress period (Fig. 3). This may
806
reflect the loss in apical dominance as a result of pollen sterility. An intriguing aspect
807
of auxins is that they regulate some aspects of plant development such as lateral root
808
development synergistically with ethylene and other hormones, while for some
809
aspects both hormones act antagonistically [180]. Recent progress in understanding
810
plant hormone action is illustrating the complexity of cross-talk between different
811
plant hormones and the importance of controlling hormone homeostasis.
812
Understanding the intricacies of these interactions is important to unravel how genetic
813
variability in the network can affect how plants adapt to environmental change.
cr
us
an
M
d
te
818
Ac ce p
814
ip t
799
819
in photomorphogenesis. Phytochromes respond to darkness (etiolation) and changes
820
in the red to far-red light ratio, which warns the plant about competing vegetation
821
(shade avoidance) [158]. Phytochromes control many growth processes from seed
822
germination to reproductive development and they are well known to modulate biotic
823
and abiotic stress responses [181].The activated form of phytochrome moves to the
815 816 817
4.5. Coordination of environmental responses Progress made in unravelling how plants react to low light conditions provided a clue as to how environmental signals regulate plant growth. Phytochrome photoreceptors react to changes in the ratio between red and far-red light and play an important role
Page 33 of 65
34 nucleus and forms a complex with members of the basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH)
825
transcription factors, the Phytochrome Interacting Factors (PIF). PIFs interact with
826
DELLA proteins; in the absence of GA, DELLA proteins bind to PIFs, preventing
827
them from regulating their target genes. In the presence of GA, DELLA proteins are
828
degraded, PIFs become functional and elongation growth is activated [161, 182, 183]
829
(Fig. 4). PIF transcription factors also activate auxin biosynthesis and their own
830
expression is controlled by the circadian clock; the Arabidopsis bZIP transcription
831
factor Hy5 (Elongated Hypocotyl) promotes photomorphogenesis by antagonizing PIF
832
action and the RING-motif E3 ligase COP1 (Constitutive Morphogenic) inhibits Hy5.
833
This pathway also influences CBF function and freezing tolerance [184]. PIFs form in
834
combination with DELLA proteins a hub for the integration of signals from various
835
hormones [183, 185-187], day-length [184, 188], light quality [158, 184], as well as
836
sugars [189] (Fig. 4). Light quality is also important for the induction of CBF
837
transcription factors and activation of cold and frost tolerance [190, 191] and PIFs
838
play a role in regulating expression of DREB transcription factors that are required for
839
drought responses [183]. Low red to far-red ratios lead to increased levels of ethylene
844
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
ip t
824
845
converge into a single, complicated signalling hub that orchestrates plant growth
846
responses. This environmental response hub may explain why one abiotic stress can
847
improve the response to other stresses (section 3.4).
840 841 842 843
[158], which affects the stability of the DELLA proteins [165] (Fig. 4). Induction of the ERF transcription factor SUB1A under flooding conditions prevents elongation growth by increasing DELLA levels, thereby inhibiting GA-mediated elongation growth [37, 38]. The PIF transcription factors also mediate cross-talk with ROS signalling [193]. These findings demonstrate how different environmental stimuli
848
Page 34 of 65
35
5. Conclusions
850
In the last decade important progress has been made using model plants in
851
understanding how plants grow and develop and how they respond to changes in the
852
environment. This know-how is still fragmentary and needs to be extended to crop
853
plants. In important crop species such as cereals, it is important to maintain
854
productivity under abiotic stress conditions during the reproductive stage. Some crop
855
plants appear to overreact and switch to growth arrest too quickly, even when survival
856
is not immediately under threat. One way of improving stress tolerance and grain
857
productivity in cereals would be to increase the threshold level at which plants switch
858
from promotion to arrest of growth. At the vegetative stage, the stay-green trait has
859
achieved this by selecting for delayed senescence. Maybe an equivalent of the stay-
860
green trait is required to protect the reproductive stage and grain formation in cereals.
861
Seed production itself is a stress survival mechanism; seed can survive prolonged
862
stress conditions in dehydrated state and this guarantees the plant’s next generation.
863
This potential may have been lost from crop plants, but genetic diversity to
864
reintroduce this trait may still be available in breeding lines, landraces or wild
866 867 868 869
cr
us
an
M
d
te
Ac ce p
865
ip t
849
progenitor species. This material can also be used to further improve our understanding of the hormonal interactions that control growth.
A lesson could be learned from flooding tolerance research, which showed that both growth arrest and acceleration can be beneficial – depending on the circumstances.
870
This response requires ethylene and ERF transcription factors. The molecular basis of
871
how flooding tolerance interacts with the environmental response hub can serve as a
872
guideline for other abiotic stresses. Response to shading also shares some of the hub
873
components used by flooding stress. Importantly, the example of flooding stress
Page 35 of 65
36 indicates that avoidance and/or escape reactions should not necessarily be treated as
875
different or independent from true tolerance responses. The common denominator is
876
“growth regulation”. It is crucial that we learn to understand how plants regulate
877
growth in function of environmental restraints; this may lead to strategies to
878
manipulate the threshold levels to switch from growth arrest to maintenance of
879
growth. Crop plants such as cereals, combined with current technologies, can help us
880
to reach that level of understanding.
cr
ip t
874
us
881
Having a single regulatory hub to integrate all environmental responses and regulate
883
plant growth and development makes a lot of sense, but a lot of questions still need to
884
be answered. We need to get a better understanding about systemic signalling and the
885
relationship between vegetative and reproductive growth. During the stage of
886
flowering and seed production, a plant behaves quite differently from a plant during
887
vegetative growth. Even though there is a shared response system to the environment,
888
growth signals still need to be relayed to different plant parts and the effect in
889
different plant parts can be interpreted very differently. For instance, nitrogen
894
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
882
895
environment. The use of Green Revolution genes in cereals has shown that reducing
896
stem elongation growth using semi-dwarf genes benefits grain yield, but there is a
897
trade-off in terms of abiotic stress tolerance and pollen fertility. Some semi-dwarf
898
mutations affect the function of DELLA proteins in the central hub controlling growth
890 891 892 893
application can stimulate vegetative growth and repress reproductive development. In cereals, grain yield depends on successful interaction between both vegetative and reproductive growth. While management, agronomy and breeding practices have focused a lot on the vegetative establishment phase of cereals, relatively little is known about the control of reproductive development and its interaction with the
Page 36 of 65
37 and abiotic stress responses (Fig. 4). This raises the question whether high yield and
900
high abiotic stress tolerance are compatible – or not. There is a strong need to fully
901
understand the function of the central environmental response hub (e.g., role of PIF
902
family members, identification of still unknown components), but the use of model
903
systems only may not allow us to achieve this and genetic variation in crop species
904
should be included in these studies. Analysing this genetic variation using new
905
generation genotyping and phenotyping technologies has vastly improved and
906
identification of candidate stress tolerance genes is made easier using genomics.
907
Proof-of-function transgenic approaches may also lead to identification of genes that
908
can be used for stress-proofing cereals.
M
909
an
us
cr
ip t
899
The technological revolution of the last decade has provided renewed hope for
911
improving abiotic stress tolerance in crops such as cereals, but it is clear that this
912
effort will increasingly require close interaction between plant scientists of different
913
disciplines, including bioinformaticians and engineers.
te
918
Ac ce p
914
d
910
919
of cited references in this review paper has been limited by journal policy. The author
920
apologises to those authors whose publications were not cited in this paper.
915 916 917
Acknowledgements
R.D. is supported by grants from the Grains Research and Development corporation (GRDC, grants CSP00130, CSP00143 and CSP00175). The author thanks Jane Edlington and Holly Staniford for their help in preparing the manuscript. The number
921
Page 37 of 65
38 922
References
923
1. FAO, How to feed the world in 2050, http://www.fao.org, 2009.
924
2. G. Edmeades, T. Fischer, D. Byerlee, Can we feed the world in 2050? In: ‘Food security from sustainable agriculture, Proceedings of the 15th Agronomy
926
Conference 2010, 2010, Lincoln, New Zealand, pp. 15-19.
cr
928
3. A.J. Hall, R.A. Richards, Prognosis for genetic improvement of yield potential
and water-limited yield of major grain crops, Field Crops Res. 143 (2013) 18-33.
us
927
ip t
925
4. R.A. Richards, J.R. Hunt, J.A. Kirkegaard, J.B. Passioura, Yield improvement and
930
adaptation of wheat to water-limited environments in Australia - a case study,
931
Crop Past. Sci. 65 (2014) 676-689.
935 936 937 938 939 940 941 942 943
M
6. L.A. Bravo, M. Griffith, Characterization of antifreeze activity in Antarctic plants,
d
934
adaptation in cereals, Crit. Rev. Plant Sci. 27 (2008) 377-412.
J. Exp. Bot. 56 (2005) 1189-1196.
te
933
5. J.L. Araus, G.A. Slafer, C. Royo, D. Serret, Breeding for yield potential and stress
7. D. Bartels, F. Salamini, Desiccation tolerance in the resurrection plant Craterostigma plantagineum. A contribution to the study of drought tolerance at
Ac ce p
932
an
929
the molecular level, Plant Physiol. 127 (2001) 1346-1353.
8. T.S. Gechev, C. Dinakar, M. Benina, V. Toneva, D. Bartels, Molecular mechanisms of desiccation tolerance in resurrection plants, Cell. Mol. Life Sci. 69 (2012) 3175-3186.
9. L. Wissler et al., Back to the sea twice: identifying candidate plant genes for molecular evolution to marine life, BMC Evol. Biol. 11 (2011) 8.
944
10. S. Shabala, Learning from halophytes: physiological basis and strategies to
945
improve abiotic stress tolerance in crops, Ann. Bot. 112 (2013) 1209-1221
Page 38 of 65
39
948 949 950 951 952
effector, Plant J. 76 (2013) 800-810. 12. H. Yoshida, Y. Nagato, Flower development in rice, J. Exp. Bot. 62 (2011) 47194730.
ip t
947
11. J.P.B. Lloyd, B. Davies, SMG1 is an ancient nonsense-mediated mRNA decay
13. M. Ciaffi, A.R. Paolacci, O.A. Tanzarella, E. Porceddu, Molecular aspects of flower development in grasses, Sex. Plant Reprod. 24 (2011) 247-282.
cr
946
14. K. Matsubara, K. Hori, E. Ogiso-Tanaka, M. Yano, Cloning of quantitative trait genes from rice reveals conservation and divergence of photoperiod flowering
954
pathways in Arabidopsis and rice, Front. Plant Sci. 5 (2014) 1-7.
958 959 960
an
16. M. Gollery, J. Harper, J. Cushman, T. Mittler, R. Mittler, POFs: what we don't know can hurt us, Trends Plant Sci. 12 (2007) 492-496. 17. B.L Gross, K.M. Olsen, Genetic perspectives on crop domestication, Trends Plant Sci. 15 (2010) 529-537.
18. R.S. Meyer, M.D. Purugganan, Evolution of crop species: genetics of
966
Ac ce p
961
M
957
obscure features. Genome Biol. 7 (2006) R57.
d
956
15. M. Gollery et al., What makes species unique? The contribution of proteins with
te
955
us
953
967
21. D. Koenig et al., Comparative transcriptomics reveals patterns of selection in
968
domesticated and wild tomato, Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 110 (2013) E2655-
969
2662.
962 963 964 965
domestication and diversification. Nat. Rev. Genet. 14 (2013) 840-852.
19. K.M. Olsen, J.F. Wendel, A bountiful harvest: genomic insights into crop domestication phenotypes, Annu. Rev. Plant Biol. 64 (2013) 47-70.
20. H. Sakai, T. Itoh, Massive gene losses in Asian cultivated rice unveiled by comparative genome analysis, BMC Genom. 11 (2010) 121-134.
Page 39 of 65
40 22. A.J. Cortés, D. This, C. Chavarro, S. Madriñán, M.W. Blair, Nucleotide diversity
971
patterns at the drought-related DREB2 encoding genes in wild and cultivated
972
common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.), Theor. Appl. Genet. 125 (2012) 1069-
973
1085.
974
ip t
970
23. B.J. Atwell, H. Wang, A.P. Scafaro, Could abiotic stress tolerance in wild
relatives of rice be used to improve Oryza sativa? Plant Sci. 215-216 (2014) 48-
976
58.
981 982 983 984
us
wheat wild relatives and landraces, J. Exp. Bot. 58 (2007) 177-186. 26. .K. Mochida, K. Shinozaki K., Unlocking Triticeae genomics to sustainably feed the future, Plant Cell Physiol. 54 (2013) 1931-1950. 27. H. Poorter et al., The art of growing plants for experimental purposes: a practical guide for the plant biologist, Func. Plant Biol. 39 (2012) 821-838. 28. R.J. Downs, H. Hellmers, Environment and the experimental control of plant
990
Ac ce p
985
an
980
25. M. Reynolds, F. Dreccer, R. Trethowan, Drought-adaptive traits derived from
M
979
utilization, J. Biosci. 37 (2012) 843-855.
d
978
24. B.M. Prasanna, Diversity in global maize germplasm: characterization and
te
977
cr
975
991
30. J.B. Passioura, the perils of pot experiments, Func. Plant Biol. 33 (2006) 1075-
986 987 988 989
992
growth, in: J.F. Sutcliffe, P. Mahlburg, Experimental Botany Vol. 6, 1975, Academic Press, London-New York-San Francisco, pp. 125-140.
29. I.G. Cummings, J.B. Reid, A. Koutoulis, Red to far-red ratio correction in plant growth chambers - growth responses and influence of thermal load on garden pea, Physiol. Plant. 131 (2007) 171-179.
1079.
Page 40 of 65
41 993
31. H. Poorter, J. Climent, D. Van Dusschoten, J. Bühler, J. Postma, Pot size matters:
994
a meta-analysis on the effect of rooting volume on plant growth, Func. Plant Biol.
995
39 (2012) 839-850. 32. D. Fleury, S. Jefferies, H. Kuchel, P. Langridge, Genetic and genomic tools to
ip t
996
improve drought tolerance in wheat, J. Exp. Bot. 61 (2010) 3211-3222.
998
33. R.A. Richards et al., Breeding for improved water productivity in temperate
1000
cereals: phenotyping, quantitative trait loci, markers and the selection environment, Func. Plant Biol. 37 (2010) 85-97.
us
999
cr
997
34. A. Greenup, W.J. Peacock, E.S. Dennis, B. Trevaskis, The molecular biology of
1002
seasonal flowering-responses in Arabidopsis and the cereals, Ann. Bot. 103
1003
(2009) 1165-1172.
M
1004
an
1001
35. B. Zheng, B. Biddulph, D. Li, H. Kuchel, S. Chapman, Quantification of the effects of VRN1 and Ppd-D1 to predict spring wheat (Triticum aestivum) heading
1006
time across diverse environments, J. Exp. Bot. 64 (2013) 3747-3761. 36. P.A. Riffkin, P.M. Evans, J.F. Chin, G.A. Kearney, Early-maturing spring wheat outperforms late-maturing winter wheat in the high rainfall environment of south-
1013
Ac ce p
1008
te
1007
d
1005
1014
39. R.A. Fischer, Understanding the physiological basis of yield potential in wheat, J.
1009 1010 1011 1012
1015 1016 1017
western Victoria. Austral. J. Agric. Res. 54 (2003) 193-202.
37. J. Bailey-Serres, L.A. Voesenek, Life in the balance: a signaling network controlling survival of flooding, Curr. Opin. Plant Biol. 13 (2010) 489-494.
38. J. Bailey-Serres et al., Making sense of low oxygen sensing, Trends Plant Sci. 17 (2012) 129-138.
Agric. Sci. 145 (2007) 99-113. 40. R.A. Fischer, Wheat physiology: a review of recent developments, Crop Pasture Sci. 62 (2011) 95-114.
Page 41 of 65
42 1018
41. N.C. Collins, F. Tardieu, R. Tuberosa, Quantitative trait loci and crop
1019
performance under abiotic stress: where do we stand? Plant Physiol. 147 (2008)
1020
469-486.
1023
ip t
1022
42. M.M. Chaves, J.P. Maroco, J.S. Pereira, Understanding plant responses to drought - from genes to the whole plant, Func. Plant Biol. 30 (2003) 239-264.
43. A. Guiboileau, R. Sormani, C. Meyer, C. Masclaux-Daubresse, Senescence and
cr
1021
death of plant organs: Nutrient recycling and developmental regulation, Comptes
1025
Rendus Biologies 333 (2010) 382-391.
44. H. Sprigg, R. Belford, S. Milroy, S.J. Bennett, D. Bowran, Adaptations for
an
1026
us
1024
growing wheat in the drying climate of Western Australia, Crop Past. Sci. 65
1028
(2014) 627-644.
M
1027
45. H. Thomas, H. Ougham, The stay-green trait, J. Exp. Bot. 65 (2014) 3889-3900.
1030
46. R.M. Rivero et al., Delayed leaf senescence induces extreme drought tolerance in
1032
47. X.R.R. Sirault, A.G. Condon, G.J. Rebetzke, G.D. Farquhar, Genetic analysis of leaf rolling in wheat, in: R. Appels, R. Eastwood, E. Lagudah, P. Langridge, M.M.
1038
Ac ce p
1033
a flowering plant, Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 104 (2007) 19631-19636.
te
1031
d
1029
1039
49. J.M. Morgan, Osmoregulation and water stress in higher plants, Annu. Rev. Plant
1034 1035 1036 1037
1040
Lynne (Eds.), Proceedings of the 11th International Wheat Genetic Symposium, Brisbane, Australia.
48. S. Bunnag, P. Pongthai, Selection of rice (Oryza sativa L.) cultivars tolerant to drought stress at the vegetative stage under field conditions, Am. J. Plant Sci. 4 (2013) 1701-1708.
Physiol. 35 (1984) 299-319.
Page 42 of 65
43 1041
50. J.M. Morgan, Growth and yield of wheat lines with differing osmoregulative
1042
capacity at high soil water deficit in seasons of varying evaporative demand, Field
1043
Crops Res. 40 (1995) 143-152. 51. T.C. Hsiao, J.C. O'Toole, E.B. Yambao, N.C. Turner, Influence of osmotic
ip t
1044
adjustment on leaf rolling and tissue death in rice (Oryza sativa L.), Plant Physiol.
1046
75 (1984) 338-341.
cr
1045
52. R.C. Babu, M.S. Pathan, A. Blum, H.T. Nguyen, Comparison of measurement
1048
methods of osmotic adjustment in rice cultivars, Crop Sci. 39 (1999) 150-158.
1049
53. H.S. Saini, D. Aspinall, Sterility in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) induced by water
an
us
1047
deficit or high temperature: possible mediation by abscisic acid. Austral. J. Plant
1051
Physiol. 9 (1982) 529-537.
1053
54. N. Powell, X. Ji, R. Ravash, J. Edlington, R. Dolferus, Yield stability for cereals in a changing climate, Func. Plant Biol. 39 (2012) 539-552.
d
1052
M
1050
55. S.N. Oliver et al., Cold-induced repression of the rice anther-specific cell wall
1055
invertase gene OSINV4 is correlated with sucrose accumulation and pollen
1056
sterility, Plant Cell Envir. 28, (2005) 1534-1551.
1058 1059 1060 1061 1062 1063 1064
Ac ce p
1057
te
1054
56. X. Ji et al., Importance of pre-anthesis anther sink strength for maintenance of grain number during reproductive stage water stress in wheat, Plant Cell Envir. 33 (2010) 926-942.
57. S.N. Oliver, E.S. Dennis, R. Dolferus, ABA regulates apoplastic sugar transport and is a potential signal for cold-induced pollen sterility in rice, Plant Cell Physiol. 48 (2007) 1319-1330. 58. X. Ji et al., Control of ABA catabolism and ABA homeostasis is important for reproductive stage stress tolerance in cereals, Plant Physiol. 156 (2011) 647-662.
Page 43 of 65
44 1065
59. D. Jaccoud, K. Peng, D. Feinstein, A. Kilian, Diversity arrays: a solid state
1066
technology for sequence information independent genotyping, Nucl. Ac. Res. 29
1067
(2001) E25.
1070
ip t
1069
60. J. Mammadov, R. Aggarwal, R. Buyyarapu, S. Kumpatla, SNP markers and their impact on plant breeding, Int. J. Plant Genom. 2012 (2012) 728398.
61. K.L. McNally et al., Genomewide SNP variation reveals relationships among
cr
1068
landraces and modern varieties of rice, Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. U.S.A 106 (2009)
1072
12273-12278.
1075
an
1074
62. M.W. Ganal et al., Large SNP arrays for genotyping in crop plants, J. Biosci. 37 (2012) 821-828.
63. J. Spindel et al, Bridging the genotyping gap: using genotyping by sequencing
M
1073
us
1071
(GBS) to add high-density SNP markers and new value to traditional bi-parental
1077
mapping and breeding populations, Theor. Appl. Genet. 126 (2013) 2699-2716.
1080 1081 1082 1083 1084 1085
te
1079
64. P.K. Gupta, P.L. Kulwal, V. Jaiswal, Association mapping in crop plants: opportunities and challenges, Adv. Genet. 85 (2014) 109-147. 65. B.E. Huang et al., A multiparent advanced generation inter-cross population for
Ac ce p
1078
d
1076
genetic analysis in wheat, Plant Biotechnol. J. 10 (2012) 826-839.
66. A. Nakaya, S.N. Isobe, Will genomic selection be a practical method for plant breeding? Ann. Bot. 110 (2012) 1303-1316.
67. J.N. Cobb, G. De Clerck, A. Greenberg, R. Clark, S. McCouch, Next-generation phenotyping: requirements and strategies for enhancing our understanding of
1086
genotype-phenotype relationships and its relevance to crop improvement, Theor.
1087
Appl. Genet. 126 (2013) 867-887.
Page 44 of 65
45 1088
68. S. Negrão, B. Courtois, N. Ahmadi, I. Abreu, N. Saibo, M. Oliveira, Recent
1089
updates on salinity stress in rice: from physiological to molecular responses, Crit.
1090
Rev. Plant Sci. 30 (2011) 329-377. 69. J. Feng et al., Characterization of metabolite quantitative trait loci and metabolic
1092
networks that control glucosinolate concentration in the seeds and leaves of
1093
Brassica napus, New Phytol. 193 (2012) 96-108.
cr
1094
ip t
1091
70. N. Carreno-Quitero et al., Untargeted metabolic quantitative trait loci analyses reveal a relationship between primary metabolism and potato tuber quality, Plant
1096
Physiol. 158 (2012) 1306-1318.
an
us
1095
71. Y. Wahyuni et al., Genetic mapping of semi-polar metabolites in pepper fruits
1098
(Capsicum sp.): towards unraveling the molecular regulation of flavonoid
1099
quantitative trait loci, Mol. Breeding 33 (2014) 503-518. 72. U. Roessner et al., Metabolic profiling allows comprehensive phenotyping of
d
1100
M
1097
genetically or environmentally modified plant systems, Plant Cell 13 (2001) 11-
1102
29.
73. C. Caldana et al., High density kinetic analysis of the metabolomics and
1108
Ac ce p
1103
te
1101
1109
75. I.A. Abreu et al., Coping with abiotic stress: Proteome changes for crop
1104 1105 1106 1107
1110 1111 1112
transcriptomic response of Arabidopsis to eight environmental conditions, Plant J. 67 (2011) 869-884.
74. C.B. Hill et al., Whole-genome mapping of agronomic and metabolomics trait to identify novel quantitative trait loci in bread wheat grown in a water-limited environment, Plant Physiol. 162 (2013) 1266-1281.
improvement, J. Prot. 93 (2013) 145-168. 76. F. Fiorani, U. Schurr, Future scenarios for plant phenotyping, Annu. Rev. Plant Biol. 64 (2013) 267-291.
Page 45 of 65
46 1113
77. N. Honsdorf, T.J. March, B. Berger, M. Tester, K. Pillen, High-throughput
1114
phenotyping to detect drought tolerance QTL in wild barley introgression lines,
1115
Plos One 9 (2014) e97047.
1117
78. B. Masuka, J.L. Araus, B. Das, K. Sonder, J.E. Cairns, Phenotyping for abiotic stress tolerance in maize, J. Integr. Plant Biol. 54 (2012) 238-249.
ip t
1116
79. A. Ballvora et al., “Deep phenotyping” of early plant response to abiotic stress
1119
using non-invasive approaches in barley, in: G. Zhang et al. (Eds.), Advance in
1120
barley sciences: proceeding of 11th International Barley Genetics Symposium,
1121
Chapter 26, Zhejiang University and Springer Science, Dordrecht, pp. 317-326.
an
us
cr
1118
80. O. Morozova, M.A. Marra, Applications of next-generation sequencing
1123
technologies in functional genomics, Genomics 92 (2008) 255-264.
1124
M
1122
81. J. Kilian, F. Peschke, K.W. Berendzen, K. Harter, D. Wanke, Prerequisites, performance and profits of transcriptional profiling the abiotic stress response,
1126
Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1819 (2012) 166-175. 82. K. Horan et al., Annotating genes of known and unknown function by large-scale coexpression analysis, Plant Physiol. 147 (2008) 41-57.
1133
Ac ce p
1128
te
1127
d
1125
1134
Genet. 7 (2011) e1002020.
1129 1130 1131 1132
1135 1136
83. N. Wang, T. Long, W. Yao, L. Xiong, Q. Zhang, C. Wu, Mutant resources for the functional analysis of the rice genome, Mol. Plant 6 (2013) 596-604.
84. G.R. Cramer, K. Urano, S. Delrot, M. Pezzotti, K. Shinozaki, Effects of abiotic stress on plants: a systems biology perspective, BMC Plant Biol. 11 (2011) 163.
85. Y-S. Seo et al., Towards establishment of a rice stress response interactome, PLoS
86. D. Kültz, Molecular and evolutionary basis of the cellular stress response, Ann. Rev. Physiol. 67 (2005) 225-257.
Page 46 of 65
47 1137
87. P. Castiglioni et al., Bacterial RNA chaperones confer abiotic stress tolerance in
1138
plants and improved grain yield in maize under water-limited conditions. Plant
1139
Physiol. 147 (2008) 446-455. 88. F.J. Schmitt et al., Reactive oxygen species: re-evaluation of generation,
ip t
1140
monitoring and role in stress-signaling in phototrophic organisms, Biochim.
1142
Biophys. Acta. 1837 (2014) 835-848.
1145
Ann. Bot. 99 (2007) 3-8.
us
1144
89. S. Debolt, V. Melino, C.M. Ford, Ascorbate as a biosynthetic precursor in plants,
90. A. Nunes-Nesi, R. Sulpice, Y. Gibon, A.R. Fernie, The enigmatic contribution of
an
1143
cr
1141
mitochondrial function in photosynthesis, J. Exp. Bot. 59, 1675-1684.
1147
91. Z. Chen, D.R. Gallie, Dehydroascorbate reductase affects leaf growth,
1149
development and function, Plant Physiol. 142 (2006) 775-787. 92. E. Olmos, G. Kiddle, T.K. Pellny, S. Kumar, C.H. Foyer, Modulation of plant
d
1148
M
1146
morphology, root architecture, and cell structure by low vitamin C in Arabidopsis
1151
thaliana, J. Exp. Bot. 57 (2006) 1645-1655.
1153 1154 1155 1156 1157
93. G. Noctor, A. Mhamdi, C.H. Foyer, The roles of reactive oxygen metabolism in
Ac ce p
1152
te
1150
drought: not so cut and dried, Plant Physiol. 164 (2014) 1636-1648.
94. M. Fujita et al., Crosstalk between abiotic and biotic stress responses: a current view from the points of convergence in the stress signaling networks, Curr. Opin. Plant Biol. 9 (2006) 436-442.
95. G.M. Pastori, C.H. Foyer, Common components, networks, and pathways of
1158
cross-tolerance to stress. The central role of “redox” and abscisic acid-mediated
1159
controls, Plant Physiol. 129 (2002) 460-468.
1160 1161
96. G. Kocsy et al., Redox control of plant growth and development, Plant Sci. 211 (2013) 77-91.
Page 47 of 65
48 1162
97. D. Hérouart, M. Van Montagu, D. Inzé, Developmental and environmental
1163
regulation of the Nicotiana plumbaginifolia cytosolic Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase
1164
promoter in transgenic tobacco, Plant Physiol. 104 (1994) 873-880.
1168 1169
ip t
1167
and auxin perspective, Plant Cell Environ. 35 (2012) 321-333.
99. A. Baxter, R. Mittler, N. Suzuki, ROS as key players in plant stress signaling, J.
cr
1166
98. V.B. Tognetti, P. Mühlenbock, F. Van Breusegem, Stress homeostasis - the redox
Exp. Bot. 65 (2014) 1229-1240. 100.
A. Krishnamurthy, B. Rathinasabapathi, Oxidative stress tolerance in plants -
us
1165
novel interplay between auxin and reactive oxygen species signaling, Plant Signal.
1171
Behav. 8 (2013) e25761-1 - e25761-5. 101.
B. Ye, J. Gressel, Transient, oxidant-induced antioxidant transcript and
M
1172
an
1170
enzyme levels correlate with greater oxidant-resistance in paraquat-resistant
1174
Conyza bonariensis, Planta 211 (2000) 50-61. 102.
Y. Shaaltiel, A. Glazer, P.F. Bocion, J. Gressel, Cross tolerance to herbicidal
te
1175
d
1173
and environmental oxidants of plant biotypes tolerant to paraquat, sulfur dioxide
1177
and ozone, Pest. Biochem. Physiol. 31 (1988) 13-23.
1178 1179 1180 1181 1182 1183 1184
Ac ce p
1176
103.
A. Altinkut, K. Kazan, Z. Ipekci, N. Gozukirmizi, Tolerance to paraquat is
correlated with the traits associated with water stress tolerance in segregating F2 populations of barley and wheat, Euphytica 121 (2001) 81-86.
104.
H.R. Lascano, M.N. Melchiorre, C.M. Luna, V.S. Trippi, Effect of photo-
oxidative stress induced by paraquat in two wheat cultivars with differential tolerance to water stress, Plant Sci. 164 (2003) 841-848.
105.
Y.H. Kim et al., Overexpression of sweet potato swpa4 peroxidase results in
1185
increased hydrogen peroxide production and enhances stress tolerance in tobacco,
1186
Planta 227 (2008) 867-881.
Page 48 of 65
49 1187
106.
T. Matsumura, N. Tabayashi, Y. Kamagata, C. Souma, H. Saruyama, Wheat
1188
catalase expressed in transgenic rice can improve tolerance against low
1189
temperature stress, Physiol. Plant. 1167 (2002) 317-327. 107.
Y.J. Im, M. Ji, A. Lee, R. Killens, A.M. Grunden, W.F. Boss, Expression of
ip t
1190
Pyrococcus furiosus superoxide reductase in Arabidopsis Enhances heat tolerance,
1192
Plant Physiol. 151 (2009) 893-904.
1193
108.
cr
1191
S.R. Prashanth, V. Sadhasivam, A. Parida, Over expression of cytosolic
copper/zinc superoxide dismutase from a mangrove plant Avicennia marina in
1195
indica Rice var Pusa Basmati-1 confers abiotic stress tolerance, Transgenic Res.
1196
17 (2008) 281-291.
an
109.
C. Huang, W. He, J. Guo, X. Chang, P. Su, L. Zhang, Increased sensitivity to
M
1197
us
1194
salt stress in an ascorbate-deficient Arabidopsis mutant, J. Exp. Bot. 56 (2005)
1199
3041-3049.
1202 1203 1204 1205 1206 1207
S. Echevarría-Zomeño et al., Regulation of translation initiation under biotic
te
1201
110.
and abiotic stresses, Int. J. Mol. Sci. 14 (2013) 4670-4683. 111.
J.X. Liu, S.H. Howell, Endoplasmic reticulum protein quality control and its
Ac ce p
1200
d
1198
relationship to environmental stress responses in plants, Plant Cell 22 (2010) 2930-2942.
112.
Y.L. Ruan, Sucrose metabolism: gateway to diverse carbon use and sugar
signaling, Annu. Rev. Plant Biol. 65 (2014) 33-67.
113.
N. Sreenivasulu, V.T. Harshavardhan, G. Govind, C. Seiler, A. Kohli,
1208
Contrapuntal role of ABA: does it mediate stress tolerance or plant growth
1209
retardation under long-term drought stress? Gene 506 (2012) 265-273.
Page 49 of 65
50 1210
114.
A. Wingler, T. Roitsch, Metabolic regulation of leaf senescence: interactions
1211
of sugar signalling with biotic and abiotic stress responses, Plant Biol. 10 Suppl 1
1212
(2008) 50-62.
1216 1217 1218 1219
ip t
networks controllng plant growth, Curr. Opin. Plant Biol. 13 (2010) 273-278. 116.
C. Jonak, L. Okrész , L. Bögre, H. Hirt, Complexity, cross talk and integration
cr
1215
S. Smeekens, J. Ma, J. Hanson, F. Rolland, Sugar signals and molecular
of plant MAP kinase signaling, Curr. Opin. Plant Biol. 5 (2002) 415-424. 117.
B. Wurzinger, A. Mair, B. Pfister, M. Teige, Cross-talk of calcium-dependent
us
1214
115.
protein kinase and MAP kinase signaling, Plant Signal. Behav. 6 (2011) 8-12. 118.
an
1213
V. Chinnusamy, K. Schumaker, J.K. Zhu, Molecular genetic perspectives on
cross-talk and specificity in abiotic stress signalling in plants, J. Exp. Bot. 55
1221
(2004) 225-236. 119.
H. Ji, J.M. Pardo, G. Batelli, M.J. Van Oosten, R.A. Bressan, X. Li, The Salt
d
1222
M
1220
Overly Sensitive (SOS) pathway: established and emerging roles, Mol. Plant 6
1224
(2013) 275-286.
1226 1227 1228 1229 1230 1231 1232 1233
120.
J. Martínez-Atienza et al., Conservation of the salt overly sensitive pathway in
Ac ce p
1225
te
1223
rice, Plant Physiol. 143 (2007) 1001-1012.
121.
E. Baena-Gonsalez, F. Rolland, J.M. Thevelein, J. Sheen, A central integrator
of transcription networks in plant stress and energy signaling, Nature 448 (2007) 938-943.
122.
J. Hanson, J. Smeekens, Sugar perception and signaling - an update, Curr.
Opin. Plant Biol. 12 (2009) 562-567. 123.
S.J. Hey, E. Byrne, N.G. Halford, The interface between metabolic and stress
signaling, Ann. Bot. 105 (2010) 197-203.
Page 50 of 65
51 1234
124.
E.H. Byrne et al., Overexpression of GCN2-type protein kinase in wheat has
1235
profound effects on free amino acid concentration and gene expression, Plant
1236
Biotech. J. 10 (2012) 328-340.
1240 1241
controlling cross-tolerance, Trends Plant Sci. 5 (2000) 241-246. 126.
R. Mittler, Abiotic stress, the field environment and stress combination,
Trends Plant Sci. 11 (2006) 15-19. 127.
ip t
1239
C. Bowler, R. Fluhr, The role of calcium and activated oxygens as signals for
cr
1238
125.
P.C. Larosa, A.K. Handa, P.M. Hasegawa, R.A. Bressan, Abscisic acid
us
1237
accelerates adaptation of cultured tobacco cells to salt, Plant Physiol. 79 (1985)
1243
138-142. 128.
A.J. Robertson, M. Ishikawa, L.V. Gusta, S.L. MacKenzie, Abscisic acid-
M
1244
an
1242
induced heat tolerance in Bromus inermis Leyss cell-suspension cultures. Heat-
1246
stable, abscisic acid-responsive polypeptides in combination with sucrose confer
1247
enhanced thermostability, Plant Physiol. 105 (1994) 181-190. S. Lu, W. Su, H. Li, Z. Guo, Abscisic acid improves drought tolerance of
triploid Bermuda grass and involves H2O2- and NO-induced antioxidant enzyme
1254
Ac ce p
1249
129.
te
1248
d
1245
1255
132.
1250 1251 1252 1253
1256
activities, Plant Physiol. Biochem. 47 (2009) 132-138.
130.
D.R. Kelley, M. Estelle, Ubiquitin-mediated control of plant hormone
signaling, Plant Physiol. 160 (2012) 47-55.
131.
P.L. Gregersen, A. Culetic, L. Boschian, K. Krupinska, Plant senescence and
crop productivity, Plant Mol. Biol. 82 (2013) 603-622. K. Harris et al., Sorghum stay-green QTL individually reduce post-flowering
drought-induced leaf senescence, J. Exp. Bot. 58 (2007) 327-338.
Page 51 of 65
52 1257
133.
K.S.V. Jagadish, J.E. Cairns, A. Kumar, I.M. Somayanda, P.Q. Craufurd,
1258
Does susceptibility to heat stress confound screening for drought tolerance in rice?
1259
Func. Plant Biol. 38 (2011) 261-269.
1262
P. Ahmad et al., Role of transgenic plants in agriculture and biopharming,
ip t
1261
134.
Biotechnol. Adv. 30 (2012) 524-530. 135.
J. Deikman, M. Petracek, J.E. Heard, Drought tolerance through
cr
1260
biotechnology: improving translation from the laboratory to farmers' fields, Curr.
1264
Opin. Biotechnol. 23 (2012) 243-250. 136.
Z. Peleg, M.P. Apse, E. Blumwald, Engineering salinity and water-stress
an
1265
us
1263
tolerance in crop plants: getting closer to the field, Adv. Bot. Res. 57 (2011) 405-
1267
432.
1268
137.
M
1266
M. Reguera, Z. Peleg, E. Blumwald, targeting metabolic pathways for genetic
engineering abiotic stress-tolerance in crops, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1819 (2012)
1270
186-194.
S.J. Oh, C.W. Kwon, D.W. Choi, S.I. Song, J.K. Kim, Expression of barley
HvCBF4 enhances tolerance to abiotic stress in transgenic rice. Plant Biotech. J. 5
1277
Ac ce p
1272
138.
te
1271
d
1269
1278
140.
1273 1274 1275 1276
(2007) 646-656.
139.
M. Kasuga, S. Miura, K. Shinozaki, K. Yamaguchi-Shinozaki, A combination
of the Arabidopsis DREB1A gene and stress-inducible rd29A promoter improved drought- and low-temperature stress tolerance in tobacco by gene transfer. Plant Cell Physiol. 45 (2004) 346-350. M. Ayada et al., Functional analysis of the durum wheat gene TdPIP2;1 and its
1279
promoter region in response to abiotic stress in rice, Plant Physiol. Biochem. 79
1280
(2014) 98-108.
Page 52 of 65
53 1281 1282 1283
141.
S.J. Oh et al., Overexpression of the transcription factor AP37 in rice improves
grain yield under drought conditions. Plant Physiol. 150 (2009) 1368-1379. 142.
D.L. Lawlor, Genetic engineering to improve plant performance under
drought: physiological evaluation of achievements, limitations, and possibilities, J.
1285
Exp. Bot. 64 (2013) 83-108. 143.
Z. Peleg, M. Reguera, E. Tumimbang, H. Walia, E. Blumwald, Cytokinin-
cr
1286
ip t
1284
mediated source/sink modifications improve drought tolerance and increase grain
1288
yield in rice under water-stress, Plant Biotechnol J. 9 (2011) 747-758.
1292 1293
an
1291
A. Alpi et al., Plant neurobiology: no brain, no gain? Trends Plant Sci. 12
(2007) 135-136. 145.
K. Brackmann, T. Greb, Long- and short-distance signaling in the regulation
M
1290
144.
of lateral plant growth, Physiol. Plant. 151 (2013) 134-141. 146.
A. Endo et al., Drought induction of Arabidopsis 9-cis-epoxycarotenoid
d
1289
us
1287
dioxygenase occurs in vascular parenchyma cells, Plant Physiol. 147 (2008) 1984-
1295
1993.
1297 1298 1299 1300 1301 1302 1303 1304
147.
R. Spicer, Symplasmic networks in secondary vascular tissues: parenchyma
Ac ce p
1296
te
1294
distribution and activity supporting long-distance transport, J. Exp. Bot. 65 (2014) 1829-1848.
148.
S. Vanneste, J. Friml, Auxin: a trigger for change in plant development, Cell
136 (2009) 1005-1016.
149.
Y. Fridman, S. Savaldi-Goldstein, Brassinosteroids in growth control: how,
when and where, Plant Sci. 209 (2013) 24-31. 150.
P.B. Brewer, H. Koltai, C.A. Beveridge, Diverse roles of strigolactones in
plant development, Mol. Plant. 6 (2013) 18-28.
Page 53 of 65
54 1305 1306 1307
151.
Z.Q. Fu, X. Dong, Systemic acquired resistance: turning local infection into
global defense, Annu. Rev. Plant Biol. 64 (2013) 839-863. 152.
P. Landi et al., Root-ABA1 QTL effects root lodging, grain yield, and other
agronomic traits in maize grown under well-watered and water-stressed
1309
conditions, J. Exp. Bot. 58 (2006) 319-326.
1314 1315 1316 1317 1318
cr
R.W. Parish, H.S. Phan, S. Iacunone, S.F. Li, Tapetal development and abiotic
us
154.
stress: a centre of vulnerability, Func. Plant Biol. 39 (2012) 553-559. 155.
an
1313
(2007) 115-136.
S. Gepstein, B.R. Glick, Strategies to ameliorate abiotic stress-induced plant
senescence, Plant Mol. Biol. 82 (2013) 623-633. 156.
M
1312
P.O. Lim, H.J. Kim, H.G. Nam, Leaf senescence, Ann. Rev. Plant Biol. 58
A.N. Stepanova, J.M. Alonso, Ethylene signaling and response: where
different regulatory modules meet, Curr. Opin. Plant Biol. 12 (2009) 548-555. 157.
d
1311
153.
R. Pierik, D. Tholen, H. Poorter, E.J.W. Visser, L.A.C.J. Voesenek, The Janus
te
1310
ip t
1308
face of ethylene: growth inhibition and stimulation, Trends Plant Sci. 11 (2006)
1320
176-183.
1321 1322 1323 1324 1325
Ac ce p
1319
158.
K.A. Franklin, Shade avoidance, New Phytol. 179 (2008) 930-944.
159.
Y. Jiang, G. Liang, S. Yang, D. Yu, Arabidopsis WRKY57 functions as a node
of convergence for jasmonic acid- and auxin-mediated signaling in jasmonic acidinduced leaf senescence, Plant Cell 26 (2014) 230-245.
160.
Y. Hu, L. Jiang, F. Wang, D. Yua, Jasmonate regulates the INDUCER OF
1326
CBF
EXPRESSION-C-REPEAT
BINDING
FACTOR/DRE
BINDING
1327
FACTOR1 cascade and freezing tolerance in Arabidopsis, Plant Cell 25 (2013)
1328
2907-2924.
Page 54 of 65
55 1329 1330 1331
161.
H. Claeys, S. De Bodt, D. Inzé, Gibberellins and DELLAs: central nodes in
growth regulatory networks, Trends Plant Sci. 19 (2014) 231-239. 162.
A.R.G. Plackett et al., DELLA activity is required for successful pollen
development in the Columbia ecotype of Arabidopsis, New Phytol. 210 (2014)
1333
825-836.
ip t
1332
163.
P. Hedden, The genes of the Green Revolution, Trends Genet. 19 (2003) 5-9.
1335
164.
F. Alghabari, M. Lukac, H.E. Jones, M.J. Gooding, Effect of Rht alleles on the
cr
1334
tolerance of wheat grain set to high temperature and drought stress during booting
1337
and anthesis, J. Agron. Crop Sci. 200 (2014) 36-45.
1340
an
1339
165.
P. Achard et al., Integration of plant responses to environmentally activated
phytohormonal signals, Science 311 (2006) 91-94. 166.
M
1338
us
1336
E.H. Colebrook, S.G. Thomas, A.L. Phillips, P. Hedden, The role of
gibberellin signalling in plant responses to abiotic stress, J. Exp. Biol. 217 (2014)
1342
67-75.
1345 1346 1347 1348 1349 1350 1351
te
1344
167.
X. Fu, N.P. Harberd, Auxin promotes Arabidopsis root growth by modulating
gibberellin response, Nature 421 (2003) 740-743.
Ac ce p
1343
d
1341
168.
P. Achard et al., The cold-inducible CBF1 factor-dependent signalling
pathway modulates the accumulation of the growth-repressing DELLA proteins via its effect on gibberellin metabolism, Plant Cell 20 (2008) 2117-2129.
169.
L.V. Kurepin et al., Role of CBFs as integrators of chloroplast Redox,
phytochrome and plant hormone signalling during cold acclimation, Int. J. Mol. Sci. 14 (2013) 12729-12763.
170.
D. Golldack, C. Li, H. Mohan, N. Probst, Gibberellins and abscisic acid signal
1352
crosstalk: living and developing under unfavorable conditions, Plant Cell Rep. 32
1353
(2013) 1007-1016.
Page 55 of 65
56 1354
171.
P. Achard, J.P. Renou, R. Berthome, N.P. Harberd, P. Genschik, Plant
1355
DELLAs retrain growth and promote survival of adversity by reducing the levels
1356
of reactive oxygen species, Cur. Biol. 18, 656-660. 172.
Y. Jiang, G, Liang, S. Yang, D. Yu, Arabidopsis WRKY57 functions as a node
ip t
1357
of convergence for jasmonic acid- and auxin-mediated signaling in jasmonic acid-
1359
induced leaf senescence, Plant Cell 26 (2014) 230-245.
1360
173.
cr
1358
Q. Ma et al., Comprehensive insights on how 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid
retards senescence in post-harvest citrus fruits using transcriptomic and proteomic
1362
approaches, J. Exp. Bot. 65 (2014) 61-74. 174.
an
1363
us
1361
C. Böttcher, C.A. Burbidge, P.K. Boss, C. Davies, Interactions between
ethylene and auxin are crucial to the control of grape (Vitis vinifera L.) berry
1365
ripening, BMC Plant Biol. 13 (2013) 222.
1368 1369 1370 1371 1372 1373 1374 1375 1376
d
E.A. Dun, P.B. Brewer, C.A. Beveridge, Strigolactones: discovery of the
elusive shoot branching hormone, Trends Plant Sci. 14 (2009) 364-372. 176.
te
1367
175.
M.G. Mason, J.J. Ross, B.A. Babst, B.N. Wienclaw, C.A.Beveridge, Sugar
demand, not auxin, is the initial regulator of apical dominance, Proc. Natl Acad.
Ac ce p
1366
M
1364
Sci. USA. 111 (2014) 6092-6097.
177.
T. Sakata et al., Auxins reverse plant male sterility caused by high
temperatures, Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 107 (2010) 8569-8574.
178.
V. Cecchetti, M.M. Altamura, G. Falasca, P. Costantino, M. Cardarelli, Auxin
regulates Arabidopsis anther dehiscence, pollen maturation, and filament elongation, Plant Cell 20 (2008) 1760-1774.
179.
K. Hirano et al., Comprehensive transcriptome analysis of phytohormone
1377
biosynthesis and signaling genes in microspore/pollen and tapetum of rice, Plant
1378
Cell Physiol. 49 (2008) 1429-1450.
Page 56 of 65
57
1380 1381 1382 1383
180.
F. Wang, X. Cui, Y. Sun, C.H. Dong, Ethylene signaling and regulation in
plant growth and stress responses, Plant Cell Rep. 32 (2013) 1099-1109. 181.
R.F. Carvalho, M.L. Campos, R.A. Azevedo, The role of phytochrome in
stress tolerance, J. Integr. Plant Biol. 53 (2011) 920-929. 182.
ip t
1379
A. Castillon, H. Shen, E. Huq, Phytochrome Interacting Factors: central
players in phytochrome-mediated light signaling networks, Trends Plant Sci. 12,
1385
514-521. 183.
P. Hornitschek et al., Phytochrome interacting factors 4 and 5 control seedling
us
1386
cr
1384
growth in changing light conditions by directly controlling auxin signaling, Plant
1388
J. 71 (2012) 699-711. 184.
P. Maibam et al., the influence of light quality, circadian rhythm, and
M
1389
an
1387
photoperiod on the CBF-mediated freezing tolerance, Int. J. Mol. Sci. 14 (2013)
1391
11527-11543. 185.
K.A. Franklin et al., Phytochrome-interacting factor 4 (PIF4) regulates auxin
te
1392
d
1390
biosynthesis at high temperature, Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 108 (2011) 20231-
1394
2035.
1395 1396 1397 1398 1399 1400 1401 1402
Ac ce p
1393
186.
P. Leivar, P.H. Quail, PIFs: pivotal components in a cellular signaling hub,
Trends Plant Sci. 16 (2011) 19-28.
187.
S.L. Lau, X.W. Deng, Plant hormone signaling lights up: integrators of light
and hormones, Curr. Opin. Plant Biol. 13 (2010) 571-577.
188.
A. Sanchez, J. Shin, S.J. Davis, Abiotic stress and the circadian clock, Plant
Sign. Behav. 6 (2011) 223-231. 189.
I. Sairanen et al., Soluble carbohydrates regulate auxin biosynthesis via PIF
proteins in Arabidopsis, Plant Cell 24 (2012) 4907-4916.
Page 57 of 65
58 1403 1404 1405
190.
K.A. Franklin, G.C. Whitelam, Light-quality regulation of freezing tolerance
in Arabidopsis thaliana, Nat. Genet. 39 (2007) 1410-1413. 191.
Z. Bieniawska et al., Disruption of the Arabidopsis circadian clock is
responsible for extensive variation in the cold-responsive transcriptome, Plant
1407
Physiol. 147 (2008) 263-279. 192.
S. Kidokoro et al., The phytochrome-interacting factor PIF7 negatively
cr
1408
ip t
1406
regulates DREB1 expression under circadian control in Arabidopsis, Plant
1410
Physiol. 151 (2009) 2046-2057. 193.
D. Chen et al., Antagonistic basic helix-loop-helix/bZIP transcription factors
an
1411
us
1409
form transcriptional modules that integrate light and reactive oxygen species
1413
signaling in Arabidopsis, Plant Cell 25 (2013) 1657-1673.
M
1412
Ac ce p
te
d
1414
Page 58 of 65
59 1414 1415
Figure Legends Figure 1: Effect of domestication in rice. Oryza rufipogon (top panel) is
1417
considered to be the ancestor of cultivated rice (Oryza sativa; bottom panel). The
1418
changes in development and overall appearance between the two lines are very
1419
obvious.
us
cr
ip t
1416
1420
Figure 2: Proposed components of abiotic stress responses in plants.
1422
Early responses to abiotic stress are likely to be general stress responses: cellular
1423
protection of macromolecules and oxidative stress, metabolic adjustments and
1424
hormonal changes that lead to developmental responses. Genetic variation in crop
1425
species can lead to different responses in reaction to certain threshold levels of
1426
abiotic stresses. Some germplasm will initiate a senescence response and stop
1427
growth, with negative yield consequences. Other germplasm is more resilient and
1429 1430 1431 1432
M
d
te
Ac ce p
1428
an
1421
will maintain growth and productivity as much as possible. The latter phenotype will require successful interaction between the different early responses to establish stress-specific responses. Genetic variation can occur at different levels of the response pathway. QTL (stars with letter “Q”) in different parts of the general stress response will affect response to different abiotic stresses. QTL in
1433
the stress-specific responses are predicted to only affect response to a particular
1434
stress. Targeting the genetic variation in the general stress response could be more
1435
successful, but may require additional QTL in the stress-specific responses. QTL
1436
for stress-specific responses may have negative effects for other stresses.
Page 59 of 65
60 1437 Figure 3: Effect of drought stress at the reproductive stage in wheat. Drought
1439
stress leads to extensive leaf senescence in wheat (top left). Re-watering results in
1440
the development of new freshly green tillers that will flower and produce grains,
1441
while grain development in the older stressed tillers is either aborted or leads to
1442
spikes without grain (top right). The close-up pictures at the bottom show prolific
1443
initiation of new tillers in response to re-watering after drought treatment.
us
cr
ip t
1438
an
1444
Figure 4: Simplified schematic representation of the components involved in the
1446
environmental response module that controls plant growth, based on the shade
1447
avoidance response pathway in Arabidopsis. The PIF and DELLA proteins are
1448
central regulators of growth and environmental responses in plants.
d
te Ac ce p
1449
M
1445
Page 60 of 65
61 Abiotic stresses affect yield and productivity of crop plants. Stress tolerance in crops correlates with maintenance of growth and productivity. Early stress-responsive genes control growth responses Selection strategies should use stress-induced traits and focus on early general stress response. Plant hormone interactions control development and abiotic stress tolerance.
ip t
1449 1450 1451 1452 1453 1454 1455
Ac ce p
te
d
M
an
us
cr
1456
Page 61 of 65
Ac ce pt e
d
M
an
us
cr
ip t
Figure(s)
Figure 1
Page 62 of 65
ip t
Q
Q Q
Oxidative Stress Q
Metabolism
Q
Q
Development Q
Q
Q
Growth
an
Senescence
M
Light Stress
Q
Temperature Q Stress
Water Stress
Others
Q
Q
Ac ce pt e
d
Stress Specific Responses
us
General Stress Response
cr
Environmental Signals
Figure 2
Page 63 of 65
ip t
Ac ce pt e
d
M
an
us
cr
+H2O
Figure 3
Page 64 of 65
Phytochrome
Receptors
an
Circadian Clock
us
cr
Abiotic stresses
ip t
Light
?
PIF
ROS Signalling
M
Sugars
d
DELLA
Ac ce pt e
Ethylene
Senescence
CBF/DREB GA
Auxin Growth
Stress-specific response
Figure 4
Page 65 of 65