| Literature DB >> 35003175 |
Ken Hoshikawa1,2,3, Dung Pham4, Hiroshi Ezura2, Roland Schafleitner3, Kazuo Nakashima1.
Abstract
Climate change is a major threat to global food security. Changes in climate can directly impact food systems by reducing the production and genetic diversity of crops and their wild relatives, thereby restricting future options for breeding improved varieties and reducing the ability to adapt crops to future challenges. The global surface temperature is predicted to rise by an average of 0.3°C during the next decade, and the Paris Agreement (Paris Climate Accords) aims to limit global warming to below an average of 2°C, preferably to 1.5°C compared to pre-industrial levels. Even if the goal of the Paris Agreement can be met, the predicted rise in temperatures will increase the likelihood of extreme weather events, including heatwaves, making heat stress (HS) a major global abiotic stress factor for many crops. HS can have adverse effects on plant morphology, physiology, and biochemistry during all stages of vegetative and reproductive development. In fruiting vegetables, even moderate HS reduces fruit set and yields, and high temperatures may result in poor fruit quality. In this review, we emphasize the effects of abiotic stress, especially at high temperatures, on crop plants, such as tomatoes, touching upon key processes determining plant growth and yield. Specifically, we investigated the molecular mechanisms involved in HS tolerance and the challenges of developing heat-tolerant tomato varieties. Finally, we discuss a strategy for effectively improving the heat tolerance of vegetable crops.Entities:
Keywords: abiotic stress; climate change; heat stress; molecular mechanism; tomato; vegetable
Year: 2021 PMID: 35003175 PMCID: PMC8739973 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.786688
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Figure 1Adverse effects of heat stress (HS) on the vegetative and reproductive phase in tomatoes.
Key genes related to heat stress (HS) mechanisms are introduced in this review.
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| Tomato | Antioxidant enzyme | Antioxidant defense | Zhou et al., |
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| Tomato | Antioxidant enzyme | Antioxidant defense | Zhou et al., |
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| Tomato, Pepper | Senescence-associated cysteine proteinase | Leaf senescence | Drake et al., |
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| Potato | Carbon assimilation and fixation | Leaf senescence | Enyedi and Pell, |
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| Transcriptional activators to HS | Transcription regulatory network | Liu et al., |
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| Master regulator of HSR | Transcription regulatory network | Yoshida et al., |
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| Transcriptional repressors | Transcription regulatory network | Ikeda et al., |
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| HS-responsive gene expression, Temperature-dependent repression (TDR) domain | Transcription regulatory network | Higashi et al., |
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| Transcriptional activators to HS | Transcription regulatory network | Ohama et al., |
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| Tomato | Transcriptional activators to HS | Transcription regulatory network | El-Shershaby et al., |
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| Tomato | Later response gene in transcription regulatory network | Transcription regulatory network | El-Shershaby et al., |
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| Tomato | Ethylene-responsive transcription factors | HS regulation | Balyan et al., |
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| Tomato | Downstream targets of HSFA | Transcription regulatory network | Rao et al., |
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| Chaperone proteins regulating the folding and accumulation of proteins, localization, and degradation | Transcription regulatory network | Kotak et al., |
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| Class A activity | Flower morphology | Wellmer et al., |
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| Class B activity | Flower morphology | Wellmer et al., |
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| Class C activity | Flower morphology | Wellmer et al., |
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| Class D activity | Flower morphology | Wellmer et al., |
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| Class E activity | Flower morphology | Wellmer et al., |
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| MADS-box transcription factor | Flower morphology | Wellmer et al., |
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| Tomato | Pistil-specific expression | Flower morphology | Müller et al., |
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| Tomato | Class B activity | Flower morphology | Müller et al., |
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| Tomato | MADS-box transcription factor, fruit parthenocarpy | Flower morphology, Fruit parthenocarpy | Klap et al., |
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| Tomato | Signal peptide, shoot, and floral meristem regulation | Shoot and floral meristem | Somssich et al., |
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| Tomato | Homeodomain transcription factor, shoot and floral meristem regulation | Shoot and floral meristem | Somssich et al., |
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| Transcriptional repressor | Auxin-dependent primordia production | Jones et al., |
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| Tomato | MADS-box transcription factor | Fruit size | Gimenez et al., |
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| ubiquitin-specific protease | Fruit size | Guo et al., |
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| Tomato | Cell cycle switch protein | Fruit size | Gonzalez et al., |
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| Tomato | miRNA | Fruit size | José Ripoll et al., |
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| Tomato | Flattening and fruit locule number | Fruit size | Rodríguez et al., |
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| Tomato | Fruit elongation | Fruit size | Rodríguez et al., |
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| Tomato | Cell wall invertase | Fruit sugar | Fridman et al., |
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| Sucrose transporter | Fruit sugar | Barker et al., | |
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| Tomato | Vascular processing enzymes, negative regulators | Fruit sugar | Ariizumi et al., |
Figure 2Schematic transcriptional regulatory network in plants examined in this review.
Figure 3Gene regulation to avoid adverse effects of heat stress on the reproductive phase in tomatoes.
Heat-tolerant tomato germplasms and screening conditions.
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| LA1500, LA1563, LA1994, LA2093 ( | Controlled environment | 67 genotypes, 2 heat tolerant and 2 heat sensitive for validation | Pollen germination rate | Zhou et al., |
| Doti Local 1, HRD 1, HRD 17, ST 10, ST 52 | Controlled environment Open field | HS: 4 d at 38/28°C, 5 d for recovering | Photosynthesis | Poudyal et al., |
| LA2854, LA1478, Nagcarlang, CL5915-153D4- | Controlled environment | HS: 32/26°C (day/night) | Number of pollen per flower | Paupière et al., |
| 15 heat-tolerant tomato mutants | Controlled environment Greenhouse | HS: 35/25°C, 16 h/8 h light/dark, 60.0 μmol m−2 s−1 | Flower number | Pham et al., |
| Nkansah (CLN2001A) (high fruit set) | Controlled environment | HS: 33.8/25.9°C (day/night) | Percentage of flower drop | Kugblenu et al., |
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| Greenhouse | Summer conditions (June- September 2014) | Fruit number | Shinozaki et al., |
| 69 genotypes (13 and 19% of the core collection and MAGIC populations, respectively) | Greenhouse | MAGIC | Stem diameter | Bineau et al., |
Representative genes available for improving heat tolerance in tomato plants.
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| Tomato | Overexpression | Transcription regulatory network | Mishra et al., |
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| Tomato | Overexpression | Accumulation of heat shock proteins | Neta-Sharir et al., |
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| Expression | Accumulation of heat shock proteins | Mahesh et al., |
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| Tomato | Expression | Accumulation of heat shock proteins | Nautiyal et al., |
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| Yeast | Overexpression | Polyamine biosynthesis | Cheng et al., |
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| Tomato | Overexpression | Anthocyanin-associated R2R3-MYB transcription factor | Meng et al., |
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| Tomato | Overexpression | Chloroplast-targeted DnaJ protein | Kong et al., |
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| Tomato | Overexpression | Glycine betaine (GB) synthesis | Zhang et al., |
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| Tomato | CRISPR/Cas9 | Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) family | Yu et al., |