4.7 Review

Metabolic engineering of osmoprotectants to elucidate the mechanism(s) of salt stress tolerance in crop plants

Journal

PLANTA
Volume 253, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00425-020-03550-8

Keywords

Osmoprotectant; Salinity; Abiotic stress; Genetic engineering

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Previous studies on engineering osmoprotectant metabolic pathway genes have focused on the performance of transgenic plants under salt stress conditions rather than elucidating the underlying mechanism(s), which are still unclear. Genetic engineering has been used to improve salt tolerance in plants by introducing preferred genes or modifying the expression of existing genes responsible for salt stress response, but there is no clear mechanistic model to explain how osmoprotectant accumulation in transgenic plants confers salt tolerance.
Main conclusionPrevious studies on engineering osmoprotectant metabolic pathway genes focused on the performance of transgenic plants under salt stress conditions rather than elucidating the underlying mechanism(s), and hence, the mechanism(s) remain(s) unclear.AbstractSalt stress negatively impacts agricultural crop yields. Hence, to meet future food demands, it is essential to generate salt stress-resistant varieties. Although traditional breeding has improved salt tolerance in several crops, this approach remains inadequate due to the low genetic diversity of certain important crop cultivars. Genetic engineering is used to introduce preferred gene(s) from any genetic reserve or to modify the expression of the existing gene(s) responsible for salt stress response or tolerance, thereby leading to improved salt tolerance in plants. Although plants naturally produce osmoprotectants as an adaptive mechanism for salt stress tolerance, they offer only partial protection. Recently, progress has been made in the identification and characterization of genes involved in the biosynthetic pathways of osmoprotectants. Exogenous application of these osmoprotectants, and genetic engineering of enzymes in their biosynthetic pathways, have been reported to enhance salt tolerance in different plants. However, no clear mechanistic model exists to explain how osmoprotectant accumulation in transgenic plants confers salt tolerance. This review critically examines the results obtained thus far for elucidating the underlying mechanisms of osmoprotectants for improved salt tolerance, and thus, crop yield stability under salt stress conditions, through the genetic engineering of trehalose, glycinebetaine, and proline metabolic pathway genes.

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