| Literature DB >> 20111677 |
Valérie Lefebvre1, Seifollah Poormohammad Kiani, Mylène Durand-Tardif.
Abstract
Plants are particularly subject to environmental stress, as they cannot move from unfavourable surroundings. As a consequence they have to react in situ. In any case, plants have to sense the stress, then the signal has to be transduced to engage the appropriate response. Stress response is effected by regulating genes, by turning on molecular mechanisms to protect the whole organism and its components and/or to repair damage. Reactions vary depending on the type of stress and its intensity, but some are commonly turned on because some responses to different abiotic stresses are shared. In addition, there are multiple ways for plants to respond to environmental stress, depending on the species and life strategy, but also multiple ways within a species depending on plant variety or ecotype. It is regularly accepted that populations of a single species originating from diverse geographic origins and/or that have been subjected to different selective pressure, have evolved retaining the best alleles for completing their life cycle. Therefore, the study of natural variation in response to abiotic stress, can help unravel key genes and alleles for plants to cope with their unfavourable physical and chemical surroundings. This review is focusing on Arabidopsis thaliana which has been largely adopted by the global scientific community as a model organism. Also, tools and data that facilitate investigation of natural variation and abiotic stress encountered in the wild are set out. Characterization of accessions, QTLs detection and cloning of alleles responsible for variation are presented.Entities:
Keywords: Arabidopsis thaliana; QTL; abiotic stress; cold stress; drought; heavy metal stress; light spectrum; natural variation; nutrient deficiency; osmotic stress
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20111677 PMCID: PMC2812820 DOI: 10.3390/ijms10083547
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1.Theoretical graph of the effect of an abiotic stress on plant growth and development.
Figure 2.Phenoscope: this Arabidopsis culture system created at INRA-IJPB Versailles is able to grow and move 735 plants over the culture table, to adjust their water and nutrient status individually and to monitor their growth by image analysis.
List of studies reporting characterization of Arabidopsis accessions in response to abiotic stress.
| 4 | 100, 80, 60 and 40% of sun light | Biometric and fitness parameters | [ |
| 157 | Far-red light (3 red/far-red rates) | Flowering time, hypocotyl length | [ |
| 141 | White, blue, red, far-red and dark | Hypocotyl length | [ |
| 52 | Far-red pulses | Hypocotyl length, angle between cotyledons | [ |
| 7 | UV-B | Biometric traits on vegetative (2) and reproductive (4) apparatus. | [ |
| 7 | UV-A, UV-B + A | 9 biometric traits on vegetative (6), reproductive (2) and root apparatus (1) and 3 derived parameters. | [ |
| 21 | 15, 20 and 25 °C | Flowering time (day of flowering, total leaf number at flowering), height at flowering | [ |
| 9 | Cold and freezing acclimation | Electrolyte leakage, LT50, genes and metabolites expression | [ |
| 4 | Cold and freezing acclimation | Electrolyte leakage, LT50, leaf sugar content | [ |
| 71 | Cold acclimation, sub-zero temperatures | Tissue damage index | [ |
| 50 | Freezing tolerance (with acclimation) | Tissue damage index, | [ |
| 12 | 6 °C, 14 °C and freezing | five biometric traits, flowering time, electrolyte leakage, anthocyanin and chlorophyll contents | [ |
| 10 | Cold (4 °C), heat (38 °C) | Gene expression | [ |
| 150 | 16 °C | Flowering time (day of flowering, total leaf number at flowering) | [ |
| 52 | 25 °C | Flowering time (total leaf number at flowering) | [ |
| 23 | 10 °C chronic exposure | Root elongation rate, candidate genes expression | [ |
| 4
| 0, 2, 4 or 6 N:P:K fertilizer doses | Biometric and fitness parameters | [ |
| 36, then 5 contrasted | Phosphate depletion (hydroxylapatite or 2,5 μM KH2PO4) | Root morphology parameters, phosphate uptake kinetics | [ |
| 6 | Phosphate depletion (5 μM NaH2PO4) | Root morphology parameters | [ |
| 3 | CO2 “enrichment” (550 ppm) | Gene expression, metabolite profile | [ |
| 35 | CO2 low, standard and enriched (250 to 710 ppm) | Biometric, developmental and metabolic parameters | [ |
| 24 | Reduce CO2 assimilation (Short days, low light, excess nitrate) | Rosette weight, enzymes and metabolites profile | [ |
| 47 | Soil saturated with water (waterlogging) | Biometric parameters | [ |
| 260 | Al3+ 1 mM or pH 4.7 | Relative root length | [ |
| 11 | Atrazine (0.25, 0.5 μM) | Metabolic and root morphology parameters, ROS accumulation | Ramel |
| 4 | 5, 10, 15 or 20 mL of water in 2 inches pot | Biometric and fitness parameters | [ |
| 39 | No stress | WUE (delta13C) | [ |
| 9 | Monitored drought stress | Projected leaves area, Transpiration rate | [ |
| 24 | Monitored mild drought stress | Total Leaf Area, Relative Water Content, Electrolyte Leackage, Cut Rosette Water Loss | [ |
| 102 | 250 mM NaCl | Germination, Fresh weight, dry weight | [ |
| 12 | 100 mM NaCl in pots | Survival | [ |
Only the studies that comprise more than two accessions are reported in this table.
Summary of the characteristics of the QTLs cloned, for abiotic environment-responsive traits in Arabidopsis.
| Photoperiod responsive flowering time | Cryptochrome | Positional cloning | 28–56 | 1822 | 45 | Yes (late) | Amino acid substitution | L | Transgenic complementation | [ | ||
| Light responsive flowering time and hypocotyls elongation | - | Phytochrome | Positional cloning | - | 140 | 1000 | Yes (early) | Amino acid substitution | Fr-2 × Col-0 | Quantative complementation | [ | |
| Light responsive hypocotyls elongation | Phytochrome | Association mapping | 18–22 | 140 accessio ns | NA | Yes (early) | Amino acid substitution | L | Transformation | [ | ||
| Light responsive hypocotyls elongation | Zinc Knucke | Positional cloning | 40 | 4600 | 7 | Yes (late) | Premature stop codon | Bay-0 × Sha | Transgenic complementation | [ | ||
| Sulfate content | SOC.1 | APR2 | 5’-Phosphosulfate reductase | Positional cloning | 48 | 411 | 4000 | Yes (early) | Amino acid substitution | Bay-0 × Sha | Transgenic and quantitative complementation | [ |
| Molybdate content | - | MOT1 | Mo transporter | Positional cloning | - | 18 | 172 | Yes (early) | 53-bp deletion in promoter | L | Heterologous system (yeast) | [ |
| Molybdate content | - | MOT1 | Mo transporter | BSA-Positional cloning | - | 200 | 346 | Yes (early) | 53- bp deletion in promoter | L | Quantitative complementation | [ |
| Na+ accumulation | - | AtHK T1 | Na+ transporter | BSA-Positional cloning | - | 60 | 2000 | Yes (early) | Deletion in upstream of AtHKT1 | Ts-1, Tsu-1 × Col-0 | Quantitative complementation | [ |
Percentage of phenotypic variance explained by QTL;
Number of plant screened;
Map resolution;
Along the fine mapping process.