| Literature DB >> 31653073 |
Rana Muhammad Atif1,2, Luqman Shahid3, Muhammad Waqas4, Babar Ali5, Muhammad Abdul Rehman Rashid6,7, Farrukh Azeem8, Muhammad Amjad Nawaz9, Shabir Hussain Wani10, Gyuhwa Chung11.
Abstract
Abiotic stresses are the major limiting factors influencing the growth and productivity of plants species. To combat these stresses, plants can modify numerous physiological, biochemical, and molecular processes through cellular and subcellular signaling pathways. Calcium-dependent protein kinases (CDPKs or CPKs) are the unique and key calcium-binding proteins, which act as a sensor for the increase and decrease in the calcium (Ca) concentrations. These Ca flux signals are decrypted and interpreted into the phosphorylation events, which are crucial for signal transduction processes. Several functional and expression studies of different CPKs and their encoding genes validated their versatile role for abiotic stress tolerance in plants. CPKs are indispensable for modulating abiotic stress tolerance through activation and regulation of several genes, transcription factors, enzymes, and ion channels. CPKs have been involved in supporting plant adaptation under drought, salinity, and heat and cold stress environments. Diverse functions of plant CPKs have been reported against various abiotic stresses in numerous research studies. In this review, we have described the evaluated functions of plant CPKs against various abiotic stresses and their role in stress response signaling pathways.Entities:
Keywords: ABA; calcium signaling; calcium-dependent protein kinases; drought; salinity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31653073 PMCID: PMC6862689 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20215298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Genome-wide identification of calcium-dependent protein kinases (CPKs) among various plant species.
| Sr. # | Common Name | Botanical Name | No. of CPKs | Genome Size (Mb) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Algae |
| 6 | 131.2 | [ |
| 2 | Apple |
| 28 | 881.3 | [ |
| 3 | Arabidopsis |
| 34 | 135 | [ |
| 4 | Banana |
| 44 | 523 | [ |
| 5 | Barley |
| 27 | 667 | [ |
| 6 | Barley |
| 28 | 667 | [ |
| 7 | Barrel clover |
| 11 | 360 | [ |
| 8 | Black cottonwood |
| 28 | 422.9 | [ |
| 9 | Poplar |
| 30 | 500 | [ |
| 10 | Butcher |
| 22 | 2 | [ |
| 11 | Cacao tree |
| 17 | 346 | [ |
| 12 | Canola |
| 25 | 1130 | [ |
| 13 | Cassava |
| 26 | 532.5 | [ |
| 14 | Caster bean |
| 15 | 400 | [ |
| 15 | Castor bean |
| 15 | 400 | [ |
| 16 | Chinese liquorice |
| 23 | 379 | [ |
| 17 | Chlamydomonas |
| 14 | 111.1 | [ |
| 18 | Clementine |
| 26 | 301.4 | [ |
| 19 | Cocoa tree |
| 17 | 346 | [ |
| 20 | Columbine |
| 16 | 306.5 | [ |
| 21 | Cotton |
| 41 | 880 | [ |
| 22 | Cotton |
| 98 | 2250–2430 | [ |
| 23 | Cucumber |
| 19 | 323.99 | [ |
| 24 | Cucumber |
| 18 | 203 | [ |
| 25 | Finger Millet |
| 4 | 1593 | [ |
| 26 | Flax |
| 47 | 318.3 | [ |
| 27 | Flooded gum |
| 22 | 691 | [ |
| 28 | Foxtail Millet |
| 27 | 405.7 | [ |
| 29 | Foxtail Millet |
| 29 | 405.7 | [ |
| 30 | Foxtail millet |
| 27 | 405.7 | [ |
| 31 | Grape |
| 19 | 500 | [ |
| 32 | Grapevine |
| 17 | 500 | [ |
| 33 | Grapevine |
| 13 | 500 | [ |
| 34 | Green algae |
| 2 | 49 | [ |
| 35 | Green algae |
| 3 | 13.2 | [ |
| 36 | Green bean |
| 25 | 521.1 | [ |
| 37 | Linseed |
| 47 | 318.3 | [ |
| 38 | Maize |
| 35 | 2500 | [ |
| 39 | Maize |
| 40 | 2500 | [ |
| 40 | Maize |
| 47 | 2500 | [ |
| 41 | Melon |
| 18 | 375 | [ |
| 42 | Monkey flower |
| 25 | 321.7 | [ |
| 43 | Mustard |
| 49 | 283.8 | [ |
| 44 | Norway spruce |
| 11 | 1960 | [ |
| 45 | Oilseed rape |
| 49 | 283.8 | [ |
| 46 | Orange |
| 24 | 319 | [ |
| 47 | Papaya |
| 15 | 135 | [ |
| 48 | Papaya |
| 15 | 135 | [ |
| 49 | Peach |
| 17 | 227.3 | [ |
| 50 | Pepper |
| 31 | 407.5 | [ |
| 51 | Pigeon Pea |
| 23 | 852 | [ |
| 52 | Potato |
| 21 | 800 | [ |
| 53 | Potato |
| 23 | 800 | [ |
| 54 | Purple false brome |
| 27 | 272 | [ |
| 55 | Purple false brome |
| 27 | 272 | [ |
| 56 | Red Shepherd’s Purse |
| 32 | 134.8 | [ |
| 57 | Rice |
| 29 | 430 | [ |
| 58 | Rice |
| 22 | 430 | [ |
| 59 | Rice |
| 30 | 372 | [ |
| 60 | Rubber tree |
| 30 | 1332 | [ |
| 61 | Salt cress |
| 31 | 238.5 | [ |
| 62 | Shepherd’s Purse |
| 32 | 134.8 | [ |
| 63 | Sorghum |
| 28 | 697.5 | [ |
| 64 | Soybean |
| 39 | 1115 | [ |
| 65 | Soybean |
| 50 | 1115 | [ |
| 66 | Soybean |
| 39 | 1115 | [ |
| 67 | Soybean |
| 41 | 978 | [ |
| 68 | Spikemosses |
| 11 | 212.5 | [ |
| 69 | Spreading earthmoss |
| 25 | 480 | [ |
| 70 | Sweet orange |
| 24 | 319 | [ |
| 71 | Switchgrass |
| 53 | 1358 | [ |
| 72 | Tobacco |
| 15 | 323.75 | [ |
| 73 | Tomato |
| 29 | 900 | [ |
| 74 | Tomato |
| 28 | 900 | [ |
| 75 | Tomato |
| 29 | 900 | [ |
| 76 | Wheat |
| 20 | 2125 | [ |
| 77 | Wild Strawberry |
| 14 | 240 | [ |
Figure 1Structure and activation process of plant CPKs. (A) CPK domain structure under the inactive state, (B) activation of CPKs after the binding of Ca2+ to the active site of the protein kinase domain (PKD), the autoinhibitory junction (AJ), and calmodulin-like domain (CaM-like domain, CaM-LD).
Various functions of CPKs in biotic and abiotic stresses in different plant species.
| Sr. # | Specie Name | Gene | Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
| Cellular homeostasis, resistance fungal elicitor. | [ |
| 2 |
| Salt resistance. | [ | |
| 3 |
| Regulate ABA-regulatory transcription factors (e.g., ABF, ABF4, drought resistance). | [ | |
| 4 |
| Regulate immunity responses, ROS-dependent cell-to-cell communication. | [ | |
| 5 |
| Drought tolerance, ABA-dependent osmotic adjustment. | [ | |
| 6 |
| Drought tolerance through interaction with protein CAT3. | [ | |
| 7 |
| Regulate the ABA-dependent signaling pathway interacting with | [ | |
| 8 |
| Drought responsiveness, ABA-mediated stomatal movements. | [ | |
| 9 |
| Phosphorylation of AtDi19, ABA signaling. | [ | |
| 10 |
| Seed germination, activation of ABA regulators. | [ | |
| 11 |
| Root-gravitropism phosphorylate | [ | |
| 12 |
| Hyperosmotic adjustments. | [ | |
| 13 |
| Salt stress, drought stress. | [ | |
| 14 |
| Salinity resistance, H2O2 and ionic homeostasis. | [ | |
| 15 |
| Vascular development, stem elongation, ethylene synthesis, lignin deposition. | [ | |
| 16 |
| ABA-regulatory gene activation. | [ | |
| 17 |
| Regulates flowering, biosynthesis of florigen and flowering locus T protein. | [ | |
| 18 |
| Salt stress, drought stress, phytohormones, and defense signaling pathways. | [ | |
| 19 |
| |||
| 20 |
| Pathogen resistance, defense functioning (i.e., regulates jasmonic and salicylic acid), ethephon. | [ | |
| 21 |
| low-temperature tolerance, fruit ripening. | [ | |
| 22 |
| Heat stress resistance, embryogenesis. | [ | |
| 23 |
| Drought stress, seed germination, and GA biosynthesis. | [ | |
| 24 |
| Microbial-associated immunity, OsRLCK176 degradation. | [ | |
| 25 |
| Fungal attacks phosphorylate OsERG1 and OsERG3. | [ | |
| 26 |
| Drought stress tolerance, ABA sensitivity spikelet fertility. | [ | |
| 27 |
| [ | ||
| 28 |
| Salt tolerance, blast disease resistance, induce ROS production, leaf senescence, | [ | |
| 29 |
| Regulate cold, salt, dehydration responses. | [ | |
| 30 |
| Cold stress interacts with sucrose synthase and plasma membrane intrinsic proteins. | [ | |
| 31 |
| Salt tolerance, ABA pathway activation. | [ | |
| 32 |
| Cold stress tolerance, inhibition of OsGrx10. | [ | |
| 33 |
| Starch accumulation, early grain filling. | [ | |
| 34 |
| Signaling localization for repression of shoot growth, GA biosynthesis. | [ | |
| 35 |
| Biotic stress immunity. | [ | |
| 36 |
| Pollen tube growth interacts with CNGC18. | [ | |
| 37 |
| Latex biosynthesis, rubber production. | [ | |
| 38 |
| Regulate ginseng growth. | [ | |
| 39 |
| Cold stress sensitivity, wounding, pathogen attack. | [ | |
| 40 |
| Regulate metabolic and developmental pathways. | [ | |
| 41 |
| Drought stress, salt stress, ABA signaling pathway. | [ | |
| 42 |
| |||
| 43 |
| Salinity and drought stress tolerance. | [ | |
| 44 |
| Cold stress regulates ZmERF3 expression. | [ | |
| 45 |
| Upregulate ABA-regulatory components (i.e., ABI5, ABF3 and RAB18) with MAPKs. | [ | |
| 46 |
| Superoxide dismutase and ascorbate peroxidase production, ABA pathway. | [ | |
| 47 |
| Salt stress tolerance. | [ | |
| 48 |
| Drought stress resistance. | [ | |
| 49 |
| Flowering. | [ | |
| 50 |
| |||
| 51 |
| [ | ||
| 52 |
| Tuber formation. | [ | |
| 53 |
| Fungal pathogen resistance, ROS production. | [ | |
| 54 |
| Blight resistance and susceptibility, ROS defense functioning. | [ | |
| 55 |
| Resistance against | [ | |
| 56 |
| Wound-induced jasmonic acid (JA) accumulation, insect resistance. | [ | |
| 57 |
| |||
| 58 |
| High-temperature stress resistance. | [ | |
| 59 |
| |||
| 60 |
| Resistance against powdery mildew. | [ | |
| 61 |
| |||
| 62 |
| ROS accumulation, cell death. | [ | |
| 63 |
| Heat-induced fruit ripening, chilling, stress tolerance. | [ | |
| 64 |
| Sensitive to Foc-TR4 infection, biotic stress tolerance. | [ | |
| 65 |
| Sensitive to Foc-TR4 infection, biotic stress tolerance. | ||
| 66 |
| Responsive for drought, cold, and salinity. | ||
| 67 |
| Salt stress, heat-responsiveness, stilbene bio-synthesis. | [ | |
| 68 |
| Salt stress, Stilbene bio-synthesis, through the induced expression of stilbene synthase (STS) genes. | [ | |
| 69 |
| Drought stress, cold stress. | [ | |
| 70 |
| Salt stress signaling. | [ | |
| 71 |
| Seed germination, seedling growth, flowering, regulation of light-dependent pathways, embryogenesis. | [ | |
| 72 |
| Drought and cold stress tolerance, ABA-responsive genes regulator. | [ | |
| 73 |
| Resistance against Penicillium infection. | [ |
Figure 2Role of different CPKs under various abiotic stresses; (A) Ca2+-dependent ABA-mediated drought and salt stress signal recognition by CPKs; (B) Ca2+ binding at the active site of protein kinase domain (PKD); (C) some drought-responsive genes involved in metabolite regulation and signal transduction pathways; (D) some salt-responsive genes and their role in antioxidant production (i.e., H2O2), as well as ROS detoxification; (E) some cold stress-responsive genes and their interaction genes activation; and (F) phosphorylation events controlling the anion channel regulation, K+-inward channel regulation, Ca2+-concentration, and channel regulation in the cell, and ABA-mediated CATALASE 3 regulation in plant cells.