| Literature DB >> 30563000 |
Natalia Osmolovskaya1, Julia Shumilina2,3, Ahyoung Kim4, Anna Didio5,6, Tatiana Grishina7, Tatiana Bilova8,9, Olga A Keltsieva10, Vladimir Zhukov11, Igor Tikhonovich12,13, Elena Tarakhovskaya14,15, Andrej Frolov16,17, Ludger A Wessjohann18.
Abstract
Drought is one of the major stress factors affecting the growth and development of plants. In this context, drought-related losses of crop plant productivity impede sustainable agriculture all over the world. In general, plants respond to water deficits by multiple physiological and metabolic adaptations at the molecular, cellular, and organism levels. To understand the underlying mechanisms of drought tolerance, adequate stress models and arrays of reliable stress markers are required. Therefore, in this review we comprehensively address currently available models of drought stress, based on culturing plants in soil, hydroponically, or in agar culture, and critically discuss advantages and limitations of each design. We also address the methodology of drought stress characterization and discuss it in the context of real experimental approaches. Further, we highlight the trends of methodological developments in drought stress research, i.e., complementing conventional tests with quantification of phytohormones and reactive oxygen species (ROS), measuring antioxidant enzyme activities, and comprehensively profiling transcriptome, proteome, and metabolome.Entities:
Keywords: Drought stress; drought models; drought tolerance; oxidative stress; phytohormones; polyethylene glycol (PEG); stress markers
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30563000 PMCID: PMC6321153 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19124089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The main drought resistance strategies employed by plants to counter water deficit periods (drought escape, drought avoidance, and drought tolerance) and the main steps of the plant response to dehydration.
Overview of drought stress model setups.
| Species | Drought Stress Model | Osmotically Active Agent | Age of Plant | Duration of Stress | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agar system | 50, 300 mmol/L mannitol | 7 days | 2 weeks | [ | |
| Agar system | 100, 200, 300 mmol/L mannitol | 8 days | 1 day | [ | |
| Agar system | 17% PEG8000 | 2 weeks | 3 days | [ | |
| Hydroponic system | PEG6000 or 8000 | Adult | 24 h | [ | |
| Soil system | No | Adult | Every 15 days until physiological maturity | [ | |
| Soil system | No | Adult | Every 15 days until physiological maturity | [ | |
| Hydroponic system | 15% PEG6000 | 5 weeks | 24 h | [ | |
|
| Soil system | No | 2 months | 0, 4, 8 24, 48, 96 h | [ |
| Agar system | Sorbitol (0.1, 0.2, 0.3, and 0.4 m) and PEG8000 (0%, 4.8%, and 9.6%) | 2 weeks | 3 weeks | [ | |
| Hydroponic system | 10, 20% PEG6000 | 1 week | 4 weeks | [ | |
| Hydroponic system | 15% PEG8000 | 25 days | 0, 3, 6, 24, 48 h | [ | |
|
| Hydroponic system | 15% PEG6000 | 28 days | 24 h | [ |
|
| Soil system | 5, 10, 15, 20, 25% PEG6000 | 1,5 months | 20, 23 days | [ |
|
| Soil system | No | Vegetativestage | 4, 8, 12 days | [ |
|
| Soil system | No | 8 weeks | 7, 15 days | [ |
|
| Soil system | No | Trefoilstage (about 3 weeks’ growth) | 7, 15 days | [ |
| Soil system | No | 2 months | 17 days | [ | |
| Hydroponic system | 20% PEG6000 | 31 days | 9 days | [ | |
| Hydroponic system | 60, 120%PEG6000 | 34 days | 7 days | [ | |
| Soil system | No | Reproductive stage | – | [ | |
| Hydroponic system | 2% PEG6000 | 2 weeks | 7 days | [ |
Figure 2Experimental drought models based on osmotic stress and established by supplementation of growth medium with polyethylene glycol (PEG): (A) Lemna minor model, established with aqueous growth medium supplemented with PEG6000 ([68]); (B) Brassica napus model, established with aerated aqueous culture supplemented with PEG8000; and (C) agar-based PEG infusion Arabidopsis thaliana model, established by overlaying solidified agar medium with PEG8000 solution for five days.
Markers of drought stress in plants.
| Parameter | Growth Model | Plant Object | Method | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Leaf water potential (MPa) | Soil | Cotton ( | Pressure chamber technique | [ |
| Relative water content (RWC; %) | Soil | Potato ( | RWC (%) = [(FW − DW)/(SW − DW)] × 100, where FW, DW, and SW are fresh, dry, and saturated (turgid)weights of leaf tissues, respectively | [ |
| Stomatal conductance | Soil | Tomato ( | Abaxial stomatal conductance measurement with diffusion porometer (AP4, Delta-T, Cambridge, UK) | [ |
| Photosynthetic parameters (chlorophyll content and PSII activity) | Soil | Barley ( | Determination of leaf chlorophyll using chlorophyll meter (SPAD-502, Minolta, Japan); measurement of chlorophyll fluorescence with portable fluorescence spectrometer (Handy PEA, Hansatech Instruments, Norfolk, UK) | [ |
|
| ||||
| Phytohormones | Soil | Clover ( | ABA analysis in xylem sap by ELISA | [ |
| Soil | Wheat ( | ABA analysis by HPLC | [ | |
| Metabolites | Soil | LMW drought stress–responsive metabolites in root and leaf samples of 7 wild and domesticated wheatrelatives revealed by GC-MS based comparative metabolomicsapproach | [ | |
| Protective proteins | Soil | Rice ( | Expression pattern analysis of OsHSP50.2, an HSP90 family gene | [ |
| Soil | Cotton ( | LEA gene expression analysis and profiling | [ | |
| ROS and antioxidant enzymes | Water culture + PEG6000 | Wheat genotypes | – | [ |
PS, photosystem II; ABA, abscisic acid; LMW, low molecular weight; LEA, late embryogenesis abundant.
Figure 3(A) The main pathways of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation in plants and (B) the major pathways of plant enzymatic antioxidant defense. SOD, superoxide dismutase; CAT, catalase; APx, ascorbate peroxidase; MDHA, monodehydroascorbate; MDHAR, monodehydroascorbate reductase; DHA, dehydroascorbate; DHAR, dehydroascorbate reductase; GSH, reduced glutathione; GSSG, oxidized glutathione; GR, glutathione reductase.