| Literature DB >> 34204152 |
Khalid Anwar1, Rohit Joshi1,2, Om Parkash Dhankher3, Sneh L Singla-Pareek4, Ashwani Pareek1,5.
Abstract
In nature, plants are exposed to an ever-changing environment with increasing frequencies of multiple abiotic stresses. These abiotic stresses act either in combination or sequentially, thereby driving vegetation dynamics and limiting plant growth and productivity worldwide. Plants' responses against these combined and sequential stresses clearly differ from that triggered by an individual stress. Until now, experimental studies were mainly focused on plant responses to individual stress, but have overlooked the complex stress response generated in plants against combined or sequential abiotic stresses, as well as their interaction with each other. However, recent studies have demonstrated that the combined and sequential abiotic stresses overlap with respect to the central nodes of their interacting signaling pathways, and their impact cannot be modelled by swimming in an individual extreme event. Taken together, deciphering the regulatory networks operative between various abiotic stresses in agronomically important crops will contribute towards designing strategies for the development of plants with tolerance to multiple stress combinations. This review provides a brief overview of the recent developments in the interactive effects of combined and sequentially occurring stresses on crop plants. We believe that this study may improve our understanding of the molecular and physiological mechanisms in untangling the combined stress tolerance in plants, and may also provide a promising venue for agronomists, physiologists, as well as molecular biologists.Entities:
Keywords: abiotic stress; climate change; combined stress; drought; flooding; heat; salinity; sequential stress
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34204152 PMCID: PMC8201344 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22116119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Representative examples showing the physiological and molecular processes studied in plants in response to combined high temperature and drought stress (HT+D).
| S.No. | Processes Studied | Crops | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Gene expression | Tobacco | [ |
| 2 | Transcriptome analysis |
| [ |
| 3 | Morpho-physiological traits | Agricultural crops | [ |
| 4 | Morpho-physiological traits | Agricultural crops | [ |
| 5 | Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) | Agricultural crops | [ |
| 6 | Physiological and Proteome changes | Maize | [ |
| 7 | Proteome changes | Agricultural crops | [ |
| 8 | Proteome changes | Rice | [ |
| 9 | Anti-oxidative enzymes, ABA response and Proteome changes | Maize | [ |
| 10 | Physiological and gene expression response |
| [ |
| 11 | Metabolic response | Maize | [ |
| 12 | Metabolic response | Rice | [ |
| 13 | Grain yield | Sorghum | [ |
| 14 | Grain growth and starch accumulation | Barley | [ |
| 15 | Genetic studies | Maize | [ |
| 16 | Antioxidant metabolism and lipid | Turfgrasses | [ |
| 17 | Physiological recovery | Kentucky bluegrass | [ |
Representative examples showing the specific interactions among various stress combinations on diverse plants.
| Stress Combinations | Crop Plants | Outcomes during Combined Stress | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Drought + salinity | Wheat |
Reduction in plant growth, biomass and net photosynthetic rate is associated with root length and root K+/Na+ concentration. | [ |
| Maize |
Primary root length significantly reduced under combined stress. 53 metabolites were differentially regulated in primary roots under stress conditions. | [ | ||
| Drought + high temperature | Tobacco |
Stomatal closure, reduced photosynthesis, enhanced respiration, and leaf temperature. Some transcripts induced during individual stress while suppressed during combined stress. Few transcripts were specifically induced during combined stress. Overlap between different transcription factors during individual and combined stress. | [ | |
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454 transcripts were specifically expressed during combined stress. Sucrose, maltose and glucose were highly accumulated under combined stress. Proline only accumulated during drought stress. | [ | ||
| Wheat |
Photosynthesis rate declined under High temperature > Drought > combined stress. High temperature significantly affects grain number, while drought affects grain weight and combined stress affects leaf chlorophyll content, spikelet fertility, total dry weight, and harvest index. | [ | ||
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Root allocation increased during drought, while reproductive allocation, hyponasty and specific leaf area increased under high temperature. Origin of accession plays a significant role during individual and combined stress. | [ | ||
| Maize |
Combined stress in comparison to a single stress strongly affected the seminal lateral roots, reducing the dry weight, length, surface area and root mass ratio (RMR). | [ | ||
| Drought + chilling | Sugarcane |
Effect of abiotic stress is cultivar-dependent where the sensitive genotypes were more affected by combined stress than tolerant genotypes. Low root temperature combined with drought severely affects PSII activity. | [ | |
| Drought + pathogen |
|
Interaction among ABA, JA, and ethylene signaling pathways regulate pathogen-, wound-, and dehydration-response and one signaling pathway may dominate over others, depending on the stress conditions. | [ | |
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11 genes differentially regulated, 23 genes specifically regulated, and reduced expression of R-gene mediated response were observed under combined heat, drought, and turnip mosaic virus stress. | [ | ||
| Drought + UV | Plants |
Combined stress induces responses that can be antagonistic, additive or synergistic in comparison to individual stresses which results from interplay between metabolic shuts. | [ | |
| Drought + high light |
|
Mutant seedlings deficient in alternative oxidase (AOX) showed accumulation of anthocyanins in leaves, alterations in photosynthetic efficiency, increased superoxide radical and reduced root growthunder combined stress. | [ | |
| Drought + low N | Wheat |
Low N stress can lead to accumulation of ABA in wheat seedlings. Combined stress was found to have significant interaction in regulation of genes for nitrate signaling, uptake and assimilation. | [ | |
| Drought + heavy metals | Red maple |
Combined stress has additive effect in both stems and roots, reductions in hydraulic conductance, xylem-specific conductivity, and leaf-specific conductivity. | [ | |
| Drought + soil compaction + mechanical stress | Tobacco |
Plant growth and fine root proportion was reduced, while root diameter and xylem area increased under combined stress. | [ | |
| Drought + nutrient | Mungbean |
Under combined stress, a significant reduction in gas exchange traits (photosynthesis, stomatal conductance, transpiration, instantaneous water use efficiency), and P uptake in seed and shoot were observed under combined stress as compared to individual stress. | [ | |
| Salinity +high/low temperature | Wheat |
Root and shoot elongation significantly reduced under individual stress. HT/LT treatment possess additive effect on growth inhibition under salt stress. α-tocopherol significantly increased under drought and salt stress but significantly decreased under HT stress. | [ | |
| Salinity + high temperature |
|
Combined stress suppressed CO2 assimilation and photosystem II efficiency. 57 differentially expressed proteins were observed under individual and combined stress. Expression of nucleoside diphosphate kinase 1, chlorophyll a/b binding protein, and ABC transporter I family member 1 was specifically induced during combined stress. | [ | |
| Salinity + pathogen | Rice |
Downregulation of | [ | |
| High temperature + ozone | Silver birch ( |
O3 reduces, while temperature increase tree growth and growth may be counteractive during combined stress. R:S ratio decreases under O3 exposure. Temperature increase may stimulate soil respiration rates and total biomass, while O3 could have opposite effect. Elevated O3 decreases C assimilation, foliar C content and productivity. | [ | |
| High temperature + pathogen |
|
NB-LRR type of R or R-like protein is the temperature-sensitive component of plant defense responses. Alterations in the R-like gene | [ | |
| High temperature + UV-C | Strawberry |
Both heat and combined treatments, decreased hue and delayed changes in the colorimetric parameters. The combined stress treatment reduced fungal infections and delayed in vitro germination of Neither the heat nor UV-C irradiation modified the total sugar content, although the combined treatment decreased it slightly relative to the control. The combination of UV-C and heat treatments enhanced the benefits of applying each treatment separately and could be useful to improve and extend strawberry fruit postharvest life. | [ | |
| High temperature + high light | Sunflower |
Comparative expression analysis of leaves and immature seeds revealed that 89, 113 and 186 genes were differentially expressed in response to HL, HT and HL + HT, respectively. | [ | |
| High temperature + CO2 | Soybean and maize |
Increased photosynthetic rates in response to CO2 enrichment, while C4 cycle is largely unresponsive to increased response to CO2 enrichment. CO2 enrichment can mitigate the effects of moderately elevated temperatures on crop yield. | [ | |
| Low temperature + pathogen | Plants |
Both virus and transgene-triggered RNA silencing are inhibited at low temperature. Thus, plants become more susceptible to viruses. RNA silencing-based phenotypes of transgenic plants are lost. However, temperature does not influence the accumulation of micro (mi) RNAs, which play a role in developmental regulation. | [ | |
| Low temperature + high light |
|
Low temperature and combined high light-low temperature decreased chlorophyll and β-carotene indicating that these treatments cause photo-oxidative stress. High light, low temperature and combined high light-low temperature treatments increased the total ascorbate pool by 10–50% and the total glutathione pool by 20–100% with no consistent effect on their redox state. | [ | |
| Pathogen + nutrient |
|
Field study on potassium disease interaction which provides evidence that facilitated entry and development of pathogens or insects in(to) potassium-deficient plants as a result of physical and metabolic changes is counteracted by an increased defense. | [ | |
| UV-B + Heavy metals | Pea |
Combined dose (UV-B + 0.01 mM Ni) caused inhibitory effects. Nickel at high doses strongly inhibited PSII activity and the inhibition was further intensified when chloroplasts were simultaneously exposed to UV-B radiation. High doses of Ni (0.1 and 1.0 mM) and UV-B alone interrupted electron flow at the oxygen evolving complex. Similar damaging effects were caused by 0.01 and 0.1 mM Ni together with UV-B, but the damage extended to PSII reaction center, in case of 1.0 mM Ni in combination with UV-B. | [ | |
| Nutrient + high CO2 |
Under the combination of [eCO2] and elevated temperature [eT] conditions, productivity increases along with the nutritional requirement for N, Ca and S. | [ | ||
| Heavy metals + heavy metals | Tomato |
Zn supply clearly reduced Cd accumulation in leaves and simultaneously increased Zn concentration. Cd-induced oxidative stress in leaves as indicated by an increase in thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS) level and chlorophyll breakdown. Zn supplementation, at low level, restored and enhanced the functional activity of these enzymes (SOD, CAT, APX and GR) as compared to Cd-alone-treated plants. The beneficial effect of adequate Zn level on Cd toxicity was confirmed by a significant decrease in TBARS level and restoration of chlorophyll content. However, when Zn was added at a high level in combination with Cd, there was an accumulation of oxidative stress, which was higher than that for Cd or excess Zn alone treatments. | [ | |
| Positive response | Drought + ozone | Birch |
Combined stress increases the N concentration in the leaves, the thickness of the upper epidermal cell wall, the number of pectinaceous projections of mesophyll cell walls, and the vacuolar tannin-like depositions and phenolic droplets, which are regarded as signs of activated stress defense mechanisms. The increase in specific foliage mass, cytoplasmic lipids (younger leaves), and a condensed appearance of the upper epidermal mucilaginous layer were caused by both drought and ozone but were not additive. | [ |
| beech trees ( |
Photosynthesis ( Comparison of AOT40 [Accumulated Ozone exposure over a threshold of 40 ppb ((80 µg/m³)], an O3 exposure-based risk index of O3 stress, and cumulative ozone uptake (COU) yielded a linear relationship throughout humid growth conditions. The findings support the hypothesis that drought protects plants from O3 injury by stomatal closure, which restricts O3 influx into leaves and decouples COU from high external ozone levels. High AOT40 erroneously suggested high O3risk under drought. Enhanced ozone levels did not aggravate drought effects in leaves and stem. | [ | ||
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Lowered stomatal conductance may be a vital tolerance mechanism to overcome combined ozone and drought. Sustained increases in both reduced ascorbate and glutathione in response to combined stress may play a role in lowering reactive oxygen species and nitric oxide toxicity. Transcriptome analysis indicated that genes associated with glucan metabolism, responses to temperature and light signaling may play a role in dampening ozone responses due to drought-induced stomatal closure during combined occurrence of these two stresses. Gene ontologies for jasmonic acid signaling and innate immunity were enriched among the 300 differentially expressed genes unique to combined stress. Differential expression of transcription factors associated with redox, defense signaling, jasmonate responses and chromatin modifications may be important for evoking novel gene networks during combined occurrence of drought and ozone. The alterations in redox milieu and distinct transcriptome changes in response to combined stress could aid in tweaking the metabolome and proteome to annul the detrimental effects of ozone and drought in Jemalong. | [ | ||
| Drought + high CO2 | Plants |
Elevated atmospheric CO2 cause an increase in leaf and canopy photosynthesis, especially in C3 plants, with minor changes in dark respiration. Additional CO2causes an increase in biomass without marked alteration in dry matter partitioning, reduced transpiration of most plants and improvement in WUE. However, spatiotemporal variation in these attributes impact agronomic performance and crop water use in a site-specific manner. Nutrient acquisition is closely associated with overall biomass and strongly influenced by root surface area. | [ | |
| salinity + High temperature | tomato |
The combination of heat and salinity provides a significant level of protection to tomato plants from the effects of salinity. We observed a specific response of plants to the stress combination, which included accumulation of glycine betaine and trehalose. The accumulation of these compounds under the stress combination was linked to the maintenance of a high K+concentration and thus a lower Na+/K+ratio, with a better performance of the cell water status and photosynthesis as compared with salinity alone. | [ | |
| Salinity + hypoxia |
|
Combined stress favored root biomass production increasing number and elongation of roots. | [ | |
| Salinity + high CO2 | lettuce |
Elevated CO2 and its combination with salinity or high light increases biomass production. Elevated CO2 and its combination with salinity or high light increases the antioxidant capacity, while high light treatment alone increased the antioxidant capacity of red-leaf lettuce, but not of green-leaf lettuce. | [ | |
| Salinity + boron |
|
Under salt stress, the activity of specific membrane components can be influenced directly by boron, regulating the water uptake and water transport through the functions of certain aquaporin isoforms. | [ | |
| Ozone + pathogen | Plants |
Cellular responses to these environmental challenges are rather similar, which might be the reason why plants that are resistant to one stress are sometimes cross-tolerant to others. | [ | |
| Microbes |
The acetate, propionate, and butyrate buffered aqueous ozone combinations had a significant 3–4 log reduction of | [ | ||
| Ozone + UV |
|
Ozone was found to be a stronger disinfectant than UV radiation, using both simultaneously was more effective than using them individually. | [ | |
| Ozone + high CO2 | Rice |
Elevated CO2 (627ppm) increases rice yields by 23%. Modest increases in grain mass and larger increases in panicle and grain number contributed to this response. The response of rice to elevated CO2 varied with fumigation technique. The more closely the fumigation conditions mimicked field conditions, the smaller was the stimulation of yield by elevated CO2. Free air concentration enrichment (FACE) experiments showed only a 12% increase in rice yield. When compared with rice grown in charcoal-filtered air, rice exposed to 62° ppb O3 showed a 14% decrease in yield. Many determinants of yield, including photosynthesis, biomass, leaf area index, grain number and grain mass, were reduced by elevated O3. | [ | |
| Pathogen + UV | Various plants |
Cellular responses to these environmental challenges are rather similar, which might be the reason why plants resistant to one stress are sometimes cross-tolerant to others. | [ | |
| High CO2 + high light | lettuce |
High light treatment alone increased production in green-leaf lettuce but not in red-leaf lettuce. On the other hand, elevated CO2and its combination with salinity or high light increased the antioxidant capacity, while high light treatment alone increased the antioxidant capacity of red-leaf lettuce, but not of green-leaf lettuce. | [ |
Figure 1The stress matrix. Different combinations of potential environmental stresses that can affect crops in the field are shown in the form of a matrix. The color of the matrix indicates stress combinations that were studied with a range of crops and their overall effect on plant growth and yield. References for the combined studies are given in the Table 2.
Figure 2Schematic representation showing the effects of combined stress on plants. Effect of combined stresses on plants is explained taking an example of heat and drought. For example, simultaneous exposure to heat and drought leads to enhanced retardation of physiological processes such as photosynthesis.
Figure 3Reactive oxygen species (ROS) signature during abiotic stress combination. (A) Abiotic stress is shown to result in the formation of a ROS signature that mediates plant acclimation or cell death. (B) A combination of two different stresses (heat and drought stress) is shown to generate a ROS signature that is unique to the stress combination and is the result of combining three different ROS signature (ROS signature for heat stress, ROS signature for drought stress and ROS signature generated from the combination of heat + drought stress).
Figure 4Unique characteristics of multi-omics studies under heat, drought and combined heat + drought stress. Venn diagram showing the overlap between (A) transcripts, (B) proteins, (C) metabolites (up-regulated or down-regulated) during heat or drought stress, or a combination of heat and drought stress. The total number of transcripts or metabolites is indicated in parenthesis. The stress-induced expression was based on a significant linear regression (p < 0.01) and a threshold of ≥1.5-fold (log2) over control [17,19].