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Insight into abscisic acid perception and signaling to increase plant tolerance to abiotic stress

Authors :
Abdul Rehman
Muhammad Tehseen Azhar
Lori Hinze
Abdul Qayyum
Hongge Li
Zhen Peng
Guangyong Qin
Yinhua Jia
Zhaoe Pan
Shoupu He
Xiongming Du
Source :
Journal of Plant Interactions, Vol 16, Iss 1, Pp 222-237 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Taylor & Francis Group, 2021.

Abstract

As changes occur in climate, abiotic stress to agricultural production is an inevitable threat to farmers’ ability to meet an increasing demand to feed people. Plants have developed a stress tolerance mechanism to reduce the effects of such environmental conditions by engaging various stress-responsive genes. Accordingly, various signal transduction networks are used to fabricate stress tolerance. Engineering of the phytohormone abscisic acid (ABA) could be a choice method for scientists to mitigate abiotic stress because of its widespread role in response to salt, drought, heat, and cold stresses including triggering stomatal regulation and leaf senescence. In addition, it plays a crucial role in seed maturation, seed dormancy, stomatal opening/closure and increases resistance against pathogens through callose depositions and regulates physiological strategies in stress signaling pathways through synchronizing of hormonal crosstalk. The transcriptional regulation can be achieved through ABA-dependent and ABA-independent signaling cascades. ABAI5 and RD29A genes are regulated in ABA-dependent and independent manners to mitigate stress tolerance. ABA regulatory components (RCARs) including pyrabactin resistance PYR/PYL genes, SnRK2 type protein kinases, transcription factors (WRKY, NAC, AREB1, bZIP, RGL2, and ABRE), reactive oxygen species, jasmonic acid and cytokinin hormones regulate ABA gene action in response to abiotic stresses.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17429145 and 17429153
Volume :
16
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Journal of Plant Interactions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.95e291aaf5254239be4cb8a5ffe6910d
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/17429145.2021.1925759