| Literature DB >> 22696006 |
Reyazul Rouf Mir1, Mainassara Zaman-Allah, Nese Sreenivasulu, Richard Trethowan, Rajeev K Varshney.
Abstract
Drought is one of the most serious production constraint for world agriculture and is projected to worsen with anticipated climate change. Inter-disciplinary scientists have been trying to understand and dissect the mechanisms of plant tolerance to drought stress using a variety of approaches; however, success has been limited. Modern genomics and genetic approaches coupled with advances in precise phenotyping and breeding methodologies are expected to more effectively unravel the genes and metabolic pathways that confer drought tolerance in crops. This article discusses the most recent advances in plant physiology for precision phenotyping of drought response, a vital step before implementing the genetic and molecular-physiological strategies to unravel the complex multilayered drought tolerance mechanism and further exploration using molecular breeding approaches for crop improvement. Emphasis has been given to molecular dissection of drought tolerance by QTL or gene discovery through linkage and association mapping, QTL cloning, candidate gene identification, transcriptomics and functional genomics. Molecular breeding approaches such as marker-assisted backcrossing, marker-assisted recurrent selection and genome-wide selection have been suggested to be integrated in crop improvement strategies to develop drought-tolerant cultivars that will enhance food security in the context of a changing and more variable climate.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22696006 PMCID: PMC3405239 DOI: 10.1007/s00122-012-1904-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theor Appl Genet ISSN: 0040-5752 Impact factor: 5.699
Fig. 1A holistic approach for integrating genomics, physiology and breeding approaches for developing the superior varieties with enhanced drought tolerance
Fig. 2An example of involvement of several physiological traits for conferring terminal drought tolerance in chickpea. A set of eight chickpea genotypes including four tolerant (ICC 14799, ICC 867, ICC14788 and ICC 3325) and four susceptible (ICC 4814, ICC 8058, ICC 3776 and ICC 7184) to drought stress (green filled circle tolerant and orange filled circle sensitive) have been characterized for: canopy temperature (°C) and canopy conductance (mg H2O m−2 h−1) measured at 42 DAS under well-watered conditions; fraction of transpirable soil water (FTSW) threshold measured in plants exposed to progressive water stress and leaf expansion rate (LER; cm2 day−1), measured between 42 and 56 DAS. Susceptible genotypes tended to have lower canopy temperature and FTSW, but higher canopy conductance and LER as compared to tolerant genotypes (color figure online)
Fig. 3An overview of three-tier screening of germplasm collection for traits related to drought tolerance. Three screening tiers are shown on the right side and the procedure of selection of germplasm followed in each tier of screening is provided on the left side
Summary of QTLs identified for drought tolerance-related traits in some major crop species
| Crop | Traits studied | Number of QTLs | Chromosome/linkage group | Phenotypic variation explained (PVE %) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rice | Grain yield | 1 ( | 12 | 51.0 | Bernier et al. ( |
| Grain yield | 2 | 2, 3 | 13.0–31.0 | Venuprasad et al. ( | |
| Relative growth rate and specific water use | 7 | 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 | 10.0–22.0 | Kato et al. ( | |
| Coleoptile length and drought resistance index | 15 | All except 3, 8, 11 | 4.9–22.7 | Song-ping et al. ( | |
| Basal root thickness and 100-grain weight | 2 | 4, 6 | 20.6–33.4 | Li-Feng et al. ( | |
| Grain yield and other agronomic traits | 77 | All except 12 | 7.5–55.7 | Lanceras et al. ( | |
| Root traits | 18 | All chromosomes | 1.2–18.5 | Ping et al. ( | |
| Root and related traits | 42 | All chromosomes | 6.0–24.4 | Courtois et al. ( | |
| Water stress indicators, phenology and production traits | 47 | All except 5 | 5.0–59.0 | Babu et al. ( | |
| Drought avoidance | 17 | All except 9 | 4.4–25.6 | Price et al. ( | |
| Osmotic adjustment | 1 ( | 8 | Major | Lilley et al. ( | |
| Maize | Yield components and secondary traits | 81 | – | 0.1–17.9 | Messmer et al. ( |
| Grain yield and yield components | 20 | 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 9 | 4.1–31.3 | Xiao et al. ( | |
| Root characteristics, drought tolerance index and yield | 56 | All chromosomes | 6.7–47.2 | Tuberosa et al. ( | |
| Leaf ABA | 1 ( | 2 (bin 1.03) | 32.0 | Tuberosa et al. ( | |
| Grain yield and yield components | 46 | All except 10 | 4.0–12.9 | Ribaut et al. ( | |
| Anthesis–silking interval | 6 | 1, 2, 5, 6, 8, 10 | 48 (total) | Ribaut et al. ( | |
| Wheat | Agronomic, phonological and physiological traits | 104 | 1A, 1B, 1D, 2B, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4D, 5A, 5B, 6A, 6B, 7A, 7B, UA-b | 11.2–33.5 | Pinto et al. ( |
| Morpho-physiological traits | 110 | All 14 chromosomes | 0.8–42.4 | Peleg et al. ( | |
| Grain yield and growth traits | 42 | 1A, 1B, 2A, 2B, 3A,3B, 4A, 4B, 5A, 6B, 7A and 7B | 3.4–53.9 | Maccaferri et al. ( | |
| Water-soluble carbohydrates and associated traits | 48 | All chromosomes except 2B, 3D, 4D, 5D, and 6D | 1.1–7.6 | Yang et al. ( | |
| Grain yield and yield components under drought | 1 | 4AL | 12.0–41.0 | Kirigwi et al. ( | |
| Yield and growth traits | 16 | 1B, 1D, 2B, 3A, 4A, 4B, 4D, 5A, 5B, 6A, 6B, 6D, 7A, 7B | – | Mathews et al. ( | |
| Stem reserves mobilization | 3 | 2D, 5D, 7D | 21.1–42.3 | Salem et al. ( | |
| Barley | Drought-related morphological and physiological traits | 18 | 1H, 2H, 3H, 4H, 5H, 6H, 7H | 14.3–57.5 | Chen et al. ( |
| Chlorophyll and chlorophyll fluorescence parameters | 5 | 1H, 2H, 4H, 6H, 7H | 6.2–13.6 | Guo et al. ( | |
| Yield and growth traits | 42 | All chromosomes | 6.5–36.9 | von Korff et al. ( | |
| Drought-related morphological and physiological traits | 68 | IH, 2H, 3H, 4H, 5H, 6H, 7H | 4.0–16.0 | Diab et al. ( | |
| Yield and other agronomic traits | 74 | All chromosomes | 1.4–84.8 | Baum et al. ( | |
| Relative water content | 6 | 2H, 5H, 6H, 7H | 6.8–11.5 | Teulat et al. ( | |
| Grain carbon isotope discrimination | 10 | 2H, 3H, 6H, 7H | – | Teulat et al. ( | |
| Osmotic adjustment (OA) and related traits | 22 | 1H, 2H, 4H, 5H, 7H | 5.0–20.0 | Teulat et al. ( | |
| Grain yield and agronomic traits | 56 | All chromosomes | 5.7–23.6 | Teulat et al.( | |
| Osmotic adjustment (OA) and related traits | 12 | 1H, 2H, 5H, 6H | 5.8–26.7 | Teulat et al. ( | |
| Sorghum | Stay green | 1 ( | A | 53.5 | Sanchez et al. ( |
| Stay green | 10 | A, C, D, E, G, H | 5.1–26.3 | Haussmann et al. ( | |
| Stay green | 9 | A, B, C, D, E, F, G, J | 9.9–22.6 | Kebede et al. ( | |
| Stay green | 8 | A, D, E, J | 9.1–32.6 | Subudhi et al. ( | |
| Stay green | 4 | A, D, J | 13.0–30.0 | Xu et al. ( | |
| Stay green | 5 | B, G, I | 10.7–14.1 | Tao et al. ( | |
| Stay green and maturity | 9 | A, B, D2, G, I1, I2, J | 7.7–47.5 | Crosta et al. (1999) | |
| Pearl millet | Grain yield and related traits | 20 | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 | 11.6–57.2 | Bidinger et al. ( |
| Grain yield and other physiological traits | 46 | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7 | 8.4–57.2 | Yadav et al. ( | |
| Soybean | Yield and wilting | 6 | D2, F, F2 | – | Monteros et al. ( |
| Leaf wilting | 1 | K | 17.0 | Bhatnagar et al. ( | |
| Yield | 1 | C2 | 7.0 | Specht et al. ( | |
| Water use efficiency | 7 | L | 8.0–14.0 | Mian et al. ( | |
| Water use efficiency | 5 | G, H, J, C1 | 5.0–13.2 | Mian et al. | |
| Common bean | Yield and yield component traits | 49 | All except LG1 | 7.0–31.0 | Blair et al. ( |
| Yield and yield component traits | 9 | – | – | Schneider et al. ( | |
| Tomato | Seed germination | 4 | 1, 8, 9, 12 | Major effects | Foolad et al. ( |
| Water use efficiency | 3 | Undetermined | – | Martin et al. ( | |
| Cotton | Productivity and physiological traits | 79 | 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 18, 20, 22, 25 | 1.7–23.7 | Saranga et al. ( |
| Productivity and physiological traits | 16 | 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 14, 15, 18, 22, 25 | 4.1–16.2 | Saranga et al. ( |
Some examples of marker-assisted selection (MAS) for drought tolerance in crop plants
| Crop | Trait improved | No. of genes/QTL transferred | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rice | Yield and grain quality under drought | Multiple QTL | Steele et al. ( |
| Cotton | Drought tolerance-related traits | 7 QTLs | Levi et al. ( |
| Common bean | Drought tolerance-related traits | Multiple QTL (9 RAPD markers) | Schneider et al. ( |