| Literature DB >> 30781763 |
Muhammad Nadeem1, Jiajia Li2, Muhammad Yahya3, Minghua Wang4, Asif Ali5, Andong Cheng6, Xiaobo Wang7, Chuanxi Ma8.
Abstract
Salinity is an ever-present major constraint and a major threat to legume crops, particularly inpan> areas with irrigated agriculture. Legumes demonstrate high sensitivity, especially during vegetative and reproductive phases. This review gives an overview of legumes sensitivity toEntities:
Keywords: CRISPR-cas9; genomics; legumes; salt stress; speed breeding; tolerance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30781763 PMCID: PMC6412900 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20040799
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic representation of plant response to salt stress (SS).
Yield reduction under different salinity levels.
| Legume Crops | Salt Concentration | Yield Loss (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soybean (Galarsum) | 14.4 dSm−1 | 50% | [ |
| Soybean (Lee) | 8.5 dSm−1 | 53% | [ |
| Soybean (loam soil) | 7 dSm−1 | 46% | [ |
| Soybean (caly soil) | 6.3 dSm−1 | 46% | [ |
| Mungbean (cv. Pusavishal) | 50 mM NaCl | 41% | [ |
| Mungbean (var. 245/7) | 8 dSm−1 | 60% | [ |
| Mungbean (var. NM-51) | 12 dSm−1 | 77% | [ |
| Mungbean (var. NM-92) | 8 dSm−1 | 61% | [ |
| Mungbean (var. 6601) | 12 dSm−1 | 72% | [ |
| Chickpea (var. FLIP 87-59) | 3.8 dSm−1 | 69% | [ |
| Chickpea (var. FLIP 87-59) | 2.5 dSm−1 | 43% | [ |
| Chickpea (var. ILC 3279) | 3.8 dSm−1 | 72% | [ |
| Fababean (loam soil) | 6.6 dSm−1 | 50% | [ |
| Fababean (clay soil) | 5.6 dSm−1 | 52% | [ |
| Fababean (loam soil) | 4.9 dSm−1 | 28% | [ |
| Fababean (clay soil) | 4.3 dSm−1 | 19% | [ |
| Lentil (cv. 6796) | 3.1 dSm−1 | 100% | [ |
| Lentil (cv. 6796) | 2 dSm−1 | 14% | [ |
| Lentil (cv. 5582) | 2 dSm−1 | 24% | [ |
| Lentil (cv. 5582) | 3.1 dSm−1 | 88% | [ |
Figure 2Schematic representation of the salt overly sensitive (SOS) pathway for salinity stress response. The SOS pathway regulates the Na+/H+ antiporters. The SS-induced increase in Ca2+ concentration in cytosol and is sensed by SOS3. SOS3 work together with SOS2 and triggers its kinase activity. The SOS2–SOS3 localized in plasma membrane. Then SOS2 phosphorylates SOS1 and triggers its antiporter (Na+/H+) activity assisting Na+ efflux from plant cell.
Figure 3Schematic representation of salinity tolerance mechanism in Legumes. Reactive oxygen species (ROS), Ca2+ and ABA are activated under SS. SS induces synthesis of ABA, which, in turn, upregulates the transcription of ion transporter genes. Overexpression of transcription factors (GmbZIPs, GmNACs, GsZFP1, AP2/ERF, CarF box-1, and CarNAC, CAP2) have been reported under salinity.
Transgenic legumes for better salt tolerance.
| Transgenic Crop | Gene Transferred | Source | Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soybean |
| Synthesis and accumulation of proline | [ | |
|
| Sodium vacuolar sequestration | [ | ||
|
| Improves salt tolerance | [ | ||
| Pea |
| Sodium vacuolar sequestration | [ | |
|
| Synthesis and accumulation of proline | [ | ||
| Chickpea |
| Synthesis and accumulation of proline | [ | |
| Faba bean |
| Synthesis and accumulation of osmolytes | [ | |
| Mashbean |
| Increase in antioxidant ability | [ | |
| Pigeon pea |
| Synthesis and accumulation of proline | [ | |
|
| Synthesis and accumulation of osmolytes | [ | ||
| Lentil |
| Synthesis and accumulation of osmolytes | [ | |
| Peanut |
| Sodium vacuolar sequestration | [ | |
|
| Improves salt tolerance | [ | ||
|
| Improves salt tolerance | [ | ||
| Alfalfa |
|
| Regulate plant Na+/H+ antiporters | [ |
|
| Improves salt tolerance | [ | ||
|
| Conferred salt tolerance | [ | ||
|
| Increased tolerance to multiple abiotic stresses | [ | ||
|
| Improves salt tolerance | [ | ||
|
| Regulate plant Na+/H+ antiporters | [ | ||
|
| Vacuolar membrane H+-pyrophosphatases and H+-ATPases | [ | ||
|
| Improves salinity tolerance | [ |
Figure 4Schematic representation of Cas9/gRNA genome editing. CRISPR/Cas9 system consists of sgRNA and Cas9 nuclease. The sgRNA directs the sequence-specific Cas9 nuclease to start double-strand DNA breaks in the target DNA. The cell’s DNA repair machinery, comprising HR and NHEJ pathways, repairs the strand breaks, creating a short deletion/insertion (gene knockout), new sequence insertion and/or sequence modification. sgRNA, single guide RNA; HR, homologous recombination; NHEJ, non-homologous end joining (adopted and modified from [236]).
Figure 5Schematic representation of approaches for developing of salt tolerant legumes. The integration of “omics” approaches along with advance genome editing (GE) tools and agronomic approaches can improve salt tolerance in legumes.