| Literature DB >> 32733391 |
Akhilesh Kumar1, Saurabh Singh1, Anand Kumar Gaurav1, Sudhakar Srivastava1, Jay Prakash Verma1.
Abstract
SalinityEntities:
Keywords: microbiome; plant growth-promoting bacteria; salinity stress; salt stress amelioration; sustainable agriculture
Year: 2020 PMID: 32733391 PMCID: PMC7358356 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.01216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 1Effects of salinity stress on different plant attributes.
FIGURE 2Effects of salinity stress on plant signaling mechanism, adaptation, and PGPR-induced stress tolerance.
FIGURE 3Extent and distribution of salt-affected soils in India (Central Soil Salinity Research Institute [CSSRI], 2019).
FIGURE 4Area of the total agricultural land in different continents that has sodic and saline soil (in millions of hectares of land) (FAO, 2019; Chauhan et al., 2019).
FIGURE 5Stress signal transduction and different signaling intermediates.
Mechanisms of salinity stress tolerance in different plants.
| Maize ( | Increase proline synthesis, maintain the water level and selective uptake of ions, and decrease electrolyte leakage | ||
| Promote plant growth by phosphate solubilization and siderophore production under salt stress | |||
| Rice ( | During salinity stress, increase plant biomass, water content, and proline and decrease reactive oxygen activities | ||
| Modify gene expression and microbial community in the rhizosphere | |||
| Alleviate the harmful effects of salinity stress and maintain bacterial diversity in the rhizosphere | |||
| Reduce lipid peroxidation and superoxide dismutase activity and promote plant growth and development | |||
| Barley ( | Ameliorate salt stress through ACC deaminase activity | ||
| Wheat ( | A higher concentration of glycine betaine-like quaternary compounds and higher shoot biomass at lower salinity levels | ||
| Modulates the gene expression profile of leaf and rhizosphere community | |||
| Higher IAA, gibberellins (GA3), zeatin (Zt), proline, and malondialdehyde | |||
| Limits uptake of toxic ions and increases production of antioxidants | |||
| Enhances production of ACC deaminase | |||
| Increases nitrogen fixation, exopolysaccharide (EPS), hydrogen cyanide (HCN), and IAA production, and ACC deaminase activity under salinity stress | |||
| Modulates rice gene and regulates the negative effect of salinity stress | |||
| Reduce lipid peroxidation and superoxide dismutase activity | |||
| Increase total soluble sugars, proline content, and dry biomass | |||
| Modulates the expression of stress-responsive genes, involving induction of | |||
| Biofilm formation on the root surface, enhanced amount of EPS, IAA, ACC deaminase activity, and solubilized phosphate | |||
| Production of ACC deaminase and promotion of plant growth promotion under salinity stress | |||
| Reduces salinity effects by ACC deaminase activities and induces systemic tolerance | |||
| Enhance photosynthesis, level of IAA, reduce abscisic acid (ABA)/ACC content, and modulate the expression of a regulatory component ( | |||
| ACC deaminase activity, production of IAA, siderophore, ammonia, and hydrogen cyanide, promoting plant growth under salinity stress | |||
| Significantly increases shoot dry weight and grain yield | |||
| Mung bean ( | Increase salinity tolerance due to ACC deaminase activity and plant growth promotion | ||
| Contain ACC deaminase, reduce ethylene production, and promote nodulation under salinity stress condition | |||
| Halotolerant PGPR promote plant length, shoot length, root length, and total biomass under saline conditions | |||
| Soybean ( | Increases chlorophyll content and length and fresh and dry weight of shoots | ||
| Pea ( | Improves colonization of diverse bacterial population, ACC deaminase activity, and protection against salinity stress | ||
| Cucumber ( | Reduce concentration of sodium ions, catalase, peroxidase, polyphenol oxidase, and total polyphenol, while potassium and phosphorus are abundantly available. Reduced level of ethylene content in plant under salt stress | ||
| Lettuce ( | Increases ascorbic acid content in response to salinity stress | ||
| Induction of antioxidant enzyme system | |||
| Tomato ( | Production of proline and ACC deaminase and promotion of plant growth | ||
| Production of EPS and antioxidants | |||
| Increases IAA production, induces expression of salt stress-responsive genes such as | |||
| Beet ( | Growth-promotion under salinity conditions with the help of nitrogen fixation, production of IAA and siderophores, phosphate solubilization, and ACC deaminase activity | ||
| Cotton ( | Salinity tolerance by the modulation of phytohormone IAA | ||
| Peppers ( | ACC deaminase activity promotes salinity stress tolerance and reduces ethylene in plant | ||
| Upregulation and adjustment of jasmonic acid (JA) metabolism | |||
| Promotes salt adaptation through regulation of transcripts associated with phytohormones, photosynthesis, osmoprotectant synthesis, and translocation of Na+ ions | |||
| Modulates | |||
| Production of EPS and ACC deaminase | |||
FIGURE 6Diagrammatic representations of plant–microbe interaction in the root and their different functions under salinity stress. Bacteria produce signaling molecules that help to support plant growth and development under stress conditions. Under salinity stress, bacterial the enzyme ACC deaminase reduces ethylene synthesis and enhances indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), Zeatin (Zt), and gibberellins (GA) in the plant. Exopolysaccharides (EPS) secreted by bacteria bind with different ions (Ca2+, K+, and Na+) to prevent their effects on the plant. Endophytic bacterial strains induce antioxidants for controlling reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation in the plant under abiotic stress conditions.