| Literature DB >> 23644891 |
Mirza Hasanuzzaman1, Kamrun Nahar, Md Mahabub Alam, Rajib Roychowdhury, Masayuki Fujita.
Abstract
High temperature (HT) stress is a major environmental stress that limits plant growth, metabolism, and productivity worldwide. Plant growth and development involve numerous biochemical reactions that are sensitive to temperature. Plant responses to HT vary with the degree and duration of HT and the plant type. HT is now a major concern for crop production and approaches for sustaining high yields of crop plants under HT stress are important agricultural goals. Plants possess a number of adaptive, avoidance, or acclimation mechanisms to cope with HT situations. In addition, major tolerance mechanisms that employ ion transporters, proteins, osmoprotectants, antioxidants, and other factors involved in signaling cascades and transcriptional control are activated to offset stress-induced biochemical and physiological alterations. Plant survival under HT stress depends on the ability to perceive the HT stimulus, generate and transmit the signal, and initiate appropriate physiological and biochemical changes. HT-induced gene expression and metabolite synthesis also substantially improve tolerance. The physiological and biochemical responses to heat stress are active research areas, and the molecular approaches are being adopted for developing HT tolerance in plants. This article reviews the recent findings on responses, adaptation, and tolerance to HT at the cellular, organellar, and whole plant levels and describes various approaches being taken to enhance thermotolerance in plants.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23644891 PMCID: PMC3676804 DOI: 10.3390/ijms14059643
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Major effects of high temperature on plants.
Effects of high temperature stress in different crop species.
| Crops | Heat treatment | Growth stage | Major effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chili pepper ( | 38/30 °C (day/night) | Reproductive, maturity and harvesting stage | Reduced fruit width and fruit weight, increased the proportion of abnormal seeds per fruit. | [ |
| Rice ( | Above 33 °C, 10 days | Heading stage | Reduced the rates of pollen and spikelet fertility. | [ |
| Wheat ( | 37/28 °C (day/night), 20 days | Grain filling and maturity stage | Shortened duration of grain filling and maturity, decreases in kernel weight and yield. | [ |
| Wheat ( | 30/25 °C day/night | From 60 DAS to maturity stage | Reduced leaf size, shortened period for days to booting, heading, anthesis, and maturity, drastic reduction of number of grains/spike and smaller grain size and reduced yield. | [ |
| Sorghum ( | 40/30 °C (day/night) | 65 DAS to maturity stage | Decreased chlorophyll (chl) content, chl | [ |
| Rice ( | 32 °C (night temperature) | Reproductive stage | Decreased yield, increased spikelet sterility, decreased grain length, width and weight. | [ |
| Maize ( | 35/27 °C (day/night), 14 days | Reproductive stage | Reduced ear expansion, particularly suppression of cob extensibility by impairing hemicellulose and cellulose synthesis through reduction of photosynthate supply. | [ |
| Rice ( | 25–42.5 °C | Vegetative growth stage | Decrease in the CO2 assimilation rate. | [ |
| Soybean ( | 38/28 °C (day/night), 14 days | Flowering stage | Decreased the leaf Pn and stomatal conductance ( | [ |
| Tobacco ( | 43 °C, 2 h | Early growth stage | Decrease in net photosynthetic rate (Pn), stomatal conductance as well as the apparent quantum yield (AQY) and carboxylation efficiency (CE) of photosynthesis. Reduced the activities of antioxidant enzymes. | [ |
| Okra ( | 32 and 34 °C | Throughout the growing period | Reduced yield, damages in pod quality parameters such as fibre content and break down of the Ca-pectate. | [ |
| Maize ( | 33–40 °C, 15 days | During Pre-anthesis and silking onwards | Severe effect on plant and ear growth rates. | [ |
| Wheat ( | 38 °C, 24 and 48 h | Seedling stage | Decreased chl and relative water content (RWC); diminished antioxidative capacity. | [ |
| Wheat ( | 32/24 °C (day/night), 24 h | At the end of spikelet initiation stage | Spikelet sterility, reduced grain yield. | [ |
DAS—Days after sowing.
Figure 2Sites of production of reactive oxygen species in plants [5].
Figure 3Classification of plants on the basis of their heat tolerance.
Figure 4Different adaptation mechanisms of plants to high temperature. A: Avoidance, T: Tolerance.
Figure 5Schematic illustration of heat induced signal transduction mechanism and development of heat tolerance in plants.
Protective effects of exogenous molecules under different heat stress conditions.
| Crops | Heat treatments | Protectants | Protective effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 42 °C, 48 h | 20 mM Pro or GB, 8 h | Restricted the H2O2 generation, improved K+ and Ca2+ contents, and increased the concentrations of free Pro | [ | |
| 45/40 °C, 10 days | 10 μM Pro, 10 days | Reduced membrane injury | [ | |
| 35/30, 40/35 and 45/40 °C as day/night | 10 μM Pro, GB and Tre | Increased growth | [ | |
| 35 °C, 48 h | 0.5 mM SA, 24 h | Decreased electrolyte osmosis | [ | |
| 43 °C, 24 h | 100 μM SA, 24 h | Higher Rubisco activity | [ | |
| 47 ± 5 °C | 0.5 & 1 μM ABA, 4 h | Decreased seedling mortality | [ | |
| 35/30, 40/35 and 45/40 °C as day/night | 2.5 μM ABA | Increased growth | [ | |
| 34.7 to 35.2 °C | 25, 50 mg L−1 BRs spray | Increased vegetative growth, total yield and quality of pods | [ | |
| 40 °C, 5 h × 3 days | 1 μM 24-EBL, 8 h | Better growth | [ | |
| 47 ± 5 °C | 100 μM IAA, 4 h | Decreased seedling mortality | [ | |
| 47 ± 5 °C | 100 μM GA, 4 h | Decreased seedling mortality | [ | |
| 42 °C, 12 & 18 h | 50 μM JA, 6 h | Upregulation of the activities of antioxidant enzymes | [ | |
| 47 ± 5 °C | 50 and 100 μM kinetin | Decreased seedling mortality | [ | |
| 45 °C, 2 h | 100 μM SNP and SNAP, 24 h | Decreased H2O2 and MDA contents. | [ | |
| 45 °C, 90 min | 150 μM SNP, 60 min | Increased the activities of CAT, SOD and POD | [ | |
| 35 ± 2 °C, 4 or 8 h | Arginine or Put (0.0, 1.25 and 2.5 mM), 4 or 8 h | Increased SOD and CAT activities, increased DNA and RNA contents, reduced MDA level | [ | |
| 33/27 °C, 16/8 h (light/dark) | Spd, 1 mM as pretreatment | Increase in the expression of Eth-related genes, PA biosynthesis genes, hormone pathways genes, and oxidation reduction genes | [ | |
| 38 °C up to flowering stage | 10 mM Put, 24 h prior to anthesis | Increased endogenous Put content and seeds/cotton boll | [ | |
| 45 °C in germinated seeds, 2 h | Put, 10 μM | Elevated activities of enzymatic and non-enzymatic antioxidants and DAO and PAO, reduced lipid peroxides in root and shoot | [ | |
| 40/30 °C, 45 days | 75 mg L−1 Na2SeO4 foliar spray | Decreased membrane damage | [ |
An outline of basic function of major classes of heat shock proteins in plant system for heat stress tolerance.
| Major classes of heat shock protein | Functions |
|---|---|
| HSP100 | ATP-dependent dissociation and degradation of aggregate protein |
| HSP90 | Co-regulator of heat stress linked signal transduction complexes and manages protein folding. It requires ATP for its function |
| HSP70, HSP40 | Primary stabilization of newly formed proteins, ATP-dependent binding and release |
| HSP60, HSP10 | ATP-dependent specialized folding machinery |
| HSP20 or small HSP (sHSP) | Formation of high molecular weight oligomeric complexes which serve as cellular matrix for stabilization of unfolded proteins. HSP100, HSP70 and HSP40 are needed for its release |
Figure 6Schematic diagram showing the molecular regulatory mechanism of heat shock proteins based on a hypothetical cellular model. Upon heat stress perceived by the plant cell, (a) monomeric heat shock factors (HSFs) are entering into the nucleus; (b) from the cytoplasm. In the nucleus, HSF monomers are form active trimer; (c) that will bind; (d) to the specific genomic region (promoter or heat shock element, HSE) of the respective heat shock gene (HSG). Molecular dissection of the HSF binding region of HSE showing that it is consists of one DNA binding domain and two domains for trimerization of HSFs. Successful transcription (e) translation and post-translational modification; (f) lead to produce functional HSP to protect the plant cell and responsible for heat stress tolerance.
List of transgenic plants, heat stress linked transgenes and their responsible role for enhancing plants towards stress tolerance.
| Transgenic plants | Transgenes | Function of transgenes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| HSP synthesis for HT tolerance | [ | ||
| HSP synthesis for thermotolerance | [ | ||
| Desaturation of fatty acids (trienoic fatty acids and hexa-decatrienoic acid) that increased the level of unsaturated fatty acids and provide HT tolerance | [ | ||
| Synthesis of sHsp | [ | ||
| Synthesis of sHSP (Class I) | [ | ||
| Heat shock transcription factor HSF1::GUS (β-glucuronidase) fusion and such modification will increase HSP production in large scale with small investment of HSFs | [ | ||
| β-glucuronidase synthesis and bind with HSFs to form active trimer | [ | ||
| Molecular chaperone function | [ | ||
| High temperature tolerance | [ | ||
| Over production of GB osmolyte that will enhance the heat tolerance | [ | ||
| Glycine betaine systhesis for tolerance to HT during imbibition and seedling germination | [ | ||
| H2O2 responsive MAPK kinase kinase (MAPKKK) production to protect against the lethality in HT | [ | ||
| Ascorbate peroxidase ( | H2O2 detoxification and conferred heat tolerance | [ |
Figure 7Diagram representing integrated circuit of different “omics” approaches that are connected to each other at molecular genetic level associated with heat stress tolerance in plants.