| Literature DB >> 31731530 |
Saeed Ul Haq1,2, Abid Khan1, Muhammad Ali1, Abdul Mateen Khattak2,3, Wen-Xian Gai1, Huai-Xia Zhang1, Ai-Min Wei4, Zhen-Hui Gong1,5.
Abstract
Due to the present scenario of climate change, plants have to evolve strategies to survive and perform under a plethora of biotic and abiotic stresses, which restrict plant productivity. Maintenance of plant protein functional conformation and preventing non-native proteins from aggregation, which leads to metabolic disruption, are of prime importance. Plant heat shock proteins (HSPs), as chaperones, play a pivotal role in conferring biotic and abiotic stress tolerance. Moreover, HSP also enhances membrane stability and detoxifies the reactive oxygen species (ROS) by positively regulating the antioxidant enzymes system. Additionally, it uses ROS as a signal to molecules to induce HSP production. HSP also enhances plant immunity by the accumulation and stability of pathogenesis-related (PR) proteins under various biotic stresses. Thus, to unravel the entire plant defense system, the role of HSPs are discussed with a special focus on plant response to biotic and abiotic stresses, which will be helpful in the development of stress tolerance in plant crops.Entities:
Keywords: abiotic stress; biotic stress; chaperone; co-chaperone; heat shock factor; protein folding; stress resistance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31731530 PMCID: PMC6862505 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20215321
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Exposures of plants to different biotic and abiotic stresses, adverse effects of these stresses on plants and response mechanisms of plants to these stresses.
Nomenclature of HSPs in prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
| Bacteria ( | Eukaryotic Cell |
|---|---|
| Caseinolytic protease (Clp B) | HSP100 |
| High Temperature Protein (Htp G) | HSP90 |
| Dna k | HSP70 |
| GroEL | HSP60 |
| Dna J | HSP40 |
| Ibp A | HSP20 |
| GroES | HSP10 |
Figure 2Schematic diagram of the activation of the HSFs and their interaction with the other pathways to counter stress situations. HSFs are activated directly or indirectly through the event of alternative splicing. HSFs further regulate the down-stream HSPs, antioxidant enzyme genes and miRNAs, which help the plants to develop stress tolerance. Arrows denote the positive while red bars stand for negative interaction. ROS (Reactive oxygen species), ABA (Abscisic acid), MAPK (Mitogen-activated Protein Kinase), DREB (Dehydration responsive element binding protein), POD (Peroxidase), CAT (Catalase), GST (Glutathione S transferase), GR (Glutathione reductase), SOD (Superoxide dismutase).
Summary of the role of plant HSP under biotic stresses.
| Biotic | Plant | Pathogen | Disease Caused | HSP Response | Expression | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Viruses |
| TVCTV, ORTV, PVX, | Penstemon disease, red spots on leaves, deformed leaves and stunted growth | HSP17.6 | Up/down | [ |
|
| TYLCV | Stunted and bushy growth and excessive branches, abnormal leaf shapes, curled inward or upward, and flower and fruit drops | HSP70 | Up/down | [ | |
|
| CNV, RCNMV, and TMV | Mosaic and discoloration on leaves of a wide-range of the host plant | HSP70 | Up | [ | |
|
| SYNV and INSV | Yellow and black rings, spots and lesions on leaves, and leads to plant death | HSP18 | Up | [ | |
|
| RSV and RBSDV | Dark green rigid leaves, white- and sometimes black-streaked strips along the leaves, veins and stem | HSP20 | Up | [ | |
|
| PVY | Potato tuber necrotic rings, spots, disease and decay | HSP | Up | [ | |
| Bacteria |
|
| Wide- range of the host, it enters the xylem of a plant and causes wilting | HSP17 | Up | [ |
|
| Bacterial wilt by blockade of conducting vessels | HSP90 | Up | [ | ||
|
|
| This bacterium causes the citrus canker and spots on leaves and blemishes on fruits. | Hsp15.5 | Up | [ | |
|
|
| Causes leaf and fruit spots on peppers and tomatoes. | Hsp16 | Up | ||
|
|
| Round to irregular brown spots. These spots enlarge and blight the whole leaves. | HSP17 | Down | [ | |
| Fungi |
|
| Causes destructive disease of rice, rice blast, rice seedling blight and pitting disease. | HSP16 | Up | [ |
|
|
| Wilting, characterized by clearing of veins, marginal necrosis, yellowing of lower leaves, adventitious roots and ultimate death of tomato plants. | HSP20 | Up | [ | |
|
| Rhizopus soft rot first appears as water-soaked areas, which then become sunken and gray mold and dusky black spores grow on the fruit surface of tomatoes. | HSP17.6 | Up | [ | ||
|
| Fungus that causes white powdery lesions and powdery mildew on tomatoes | HSP72 | Up | [ | ||
|
| Rhizoctonia solani | Fungus which causes collar rot, root rot and damping off | HSP17.4 | Up | [ | |
|
|
| Fungus causes scab disease on apples and pears | HSP21 | Down | [ | |
|
|
| Fungus causes late blight of potatoes | HSP17.8 | Up | [ | |
|
|
| Fungus causes powdery mildew on grasses and cereals like barley. | Hsp16.9 | Up | [ | |
| Nematodes |
|
| Stunted growth, root necrosis and the plant shows symptoms similar to nutrient and water deficiency | 54 HSP | Up | [ |
|
|
| Root knot on tropical crops, it is causes irregular galls and swollen roots | HSP22.4 | Up | [ | |
|
| Forms cysts on the roots of soybeans. It causes chlorosis of leaves and stem and root necrosis | HSP20 | Up | [ | ||
|
|
| Irregular galls on the root of sunflowers | HSP17.6 | Up | [ | |
|
|
| Knots and galls on the roots of tomatoes, swollen roots and dwarf stem | HSP90 | Up | [ | |
|
|
| Root knot and galls on tobacco roots and causes wilting of leaves | HSP90 | Up | [ |
Turnip vein clearing virus (TVCTV), Oilseed rape virus (ORTV), Potato virus X (PVX), Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV), Turnip mosaic virus (TuMV), Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV), Cucumber Necrosis Virus (CNV), Red clover necrotic mosaic virus (RCNMV), Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV), Sonchus yellow net virus (SYNV), Impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV), Rice stripe virus (RSV), Rice black Streaked dwarf Virus (RBSDV), Potato virus Y (PVY).
Summary of studies of plant HSP and abiotic stresses.
| Abiotic Factors | Plant | Type of HSP | Expression Pattern | Technique Used | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High temperature stress | Wheat | HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ |
| HSP26 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | ||
| Rice | HSP100 | up | WB | [ | |
| HSP90 | up | q-PCR | [ | ||
| Maize | HSP101 | up | SDS-PAGE | [ | |
| HSP70, HSP17.6 | up | SDS-PAGE | [ | ||
|
| HSP101 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| HSP100 | up | SDS-PAGE | [ | ||
| HSP90 | up | qRT-PCR, WB | [ | ||
| HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | ||
| HSP60 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | ||
| Potato | HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Tomato | HSP70 | up | SDS-PAGE, WB | [ | |
| HSP20 | up/down | qRT-PCR | [ | ||
| Pea | HSP17.9 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | ||
| Pepper | HSP70 | up/down | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | ||
| HSP60 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | ||
| HSP20 | up/down | qRT-PCR | [ | ||
| HSP16.4 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | ||
| Soybean | HSP90 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Cabbage | HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Tea | All HSPs | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Witch grass | HSP70 | up | MA, qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Alfalfa | HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Foxtail millet | HSP20 | down | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Chrysanthemum | HSP70 | up | MS, qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Low temperature stress |
| HSP70 | up | MS, qRT-PCR | [ |
| Tobacco | HSP70 | up | MS, qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Maize | HSP70 | up | MA, qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Wheat | HSP70 | up | MS | [ | |
| HSP90 | up | MS | [ | ||
| HSP60 | down | MS, qRT-PCR | [ | ||
| Rice | HSP75 | up | MS, qRT-PCR | [ | |
| HSP90 | up | MS | [ | ||
| Barley | HSP70 | up | MS | [ | |
| Chicory | All HSPs | up | MS | [ | |
| Rape seed | HSP90 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Poplar | HSP70 | up | MS | [ | |
| Pea | HSP70 | up | MS | [ | |
| Sunflower | HSP60 | down | MS, qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Tomato | HSP110 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Plum | HSP20 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Grape | HSP18 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Salinity stress | Wheat | HSP70 | up | MS | [ |
| All HSPs | up | [ | |||
| Rice | HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| HSP40 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | ||
| ClpD1 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | ||
|
| HSP90.2 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Rose | 17.8 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Soybean | HSP90 | up/down | MS | [ | |
| Poplar | HSP100 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Drought stress |
| HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ |
| Tobacco | HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Barley | HSP17.5 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Rice | HSP70 | up | MA, MS, qRT-PCR | [ | |
| HSP101 | up | MS | [ | ||
| HSP17.7 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | ||
| Maize | HSP70 | up | MS | [ | |
| Pepper | HSP16.4 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Chickpea | HSP70 | up | MS, qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Sugarcane | HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Cotton | All HSPs | up | qRT-PCR, WB | [ | |
| Kentucky grass | HSP70 | up | MS | [ | |
| Poplar | HSP70 | up | MS | [ | |
| Light stress |
| HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ |
| Goose foot plant | HSP23 | up | SDS-PAGE | [ | |
| Chlamydomonas | HSP70 | up | MA | [ | |
| Heavy metal stress | Tomato | HSP70 | up | MS, SDS-PAGE | [ |
| Rice | HSP70 | up | MS, SDS-PAGE | [ | |
| HSP80 | up | MA | [ | ||
| Poplar | HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Soybean | HSP26 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Carrot | HSP17.7 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Flaxseed | HSP70 | up | MA, MS | [ | |
| HSP80 | down | ||||
|
| HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR, NB, MS | [ | |
| Bird foot trefoil | HSP90 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Flooding stress |
| HSP101 | up | qRT-PCR | [ |
| Tomato | HSP23.6 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Rice | HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR | [ | |
| Maize | HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR, WB | [ | |
| Soybean | HSP70 | up | qRT-PCR, SDS-PAGE | [ | |
| HSP60 | up | MS | [ |
Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR), Mass spectrometry (MS), Microarray (MA), Western blotting (WB), Northern blotting (NB), Sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE).
Figure 3Schematic presentation of the HSP transcriptional regulation, transport and disposal, under biotic and abiotic stresses. The diagram integrates both positive (Arrows) and negative (Bars) regulatory mechanisms. Biotic and abiotic stresses provoke the HSFs through calcium accumulation, recognition of invading pathogen effector proteins, ROS or misfolding and aggregation of cell proteins, which results in activation of HSP and other stress responsive proteins. ROS (Reactive oxygen species), PLD (Phospholipase D), MAPK (Mitogen-activated protein kinase), CDPK (Calcium-dependent protein kinase), HSF (Heat shock factor), CBF (C-repeat binding factor), DREB (Dehydration response element binding protein), ABRE (Abscisic acid-responsive element), MYB (Myeloblastosis), HSP (Heat shock protein), RLKs (Receptor-like kinases), RLP (Receptor-like proteins), PAMP (Pathogenesis-associated molecular pattern), PTI (Pattern-triggered immunity), ETI (Effector-triggered immunity) NLR (Node-like receptor protein), GST (Glutathione-s-transferase), APX2(Ascorbate peroxidase 2).