4.5 Review

Analyzing the regulatory role of heat shock transcription factors in plant heat stress tolerance: a brief appraisal

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY REPORTS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11033-022-07190-x

Keywords

Abiotic stress; Climate change; Gene regulation; Heat shock proteins; Biotechnology; Genomics; Plant breeding; Stress tolerance

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The increase in ambient temperature poses a global threat to crop production. Plants have developed sophisticated heat stress response mechanisms, involving heat shock proteins and heat shock transcription factors, to protect themselves from heat stress. Recent advances in understanding the complex regulatory networks of heat shock transcription factors have provided insights into the potential for breeding thermotolerant crop cultivars.
An increase in ambient temperature throughout the twenty-first century has been described as a worldwide threat for crop production. Due to their sessile lifestyles, plants have evolved highly sophisticated and complex heat stress response (HSR) mechanisms to respond to higher temperatures. The HSR allows plants to minimize the damages caused by heat stress (HS), thus enabling cellular protection. HSR is crucial for their lifecycle and yield, particularly for plants grown in the field. At the cellular level, HSR involves the production of heat shock proteins (HSPs) and other stress-responsive proteins to counter the negative effects of HS. The expression of most HSPs is transcriptionally regulated by heat shock transcription factors (HSFs). HSFs are a group of evolutionary conserved regulatory proteins present in all eukaryotes and regulate various stress responses and biological processes in plants. In recent years, significant progress has been made in deciphering the complex regulatory network of HSFs, and several HSFs not only from model plants but also from major crops have been functionally characterized. Therefore, this review explores the progress made in this fascinating research area and debates the further potential to breed thermotolerant crop cultivars through the modulation of HSF networks. Furthermore, we discussed the role of HSFs in plant HS tolerance in a class-specific manner and shed light on their functional diversity, which is evident from their mode of action. Additionally, some research gaps have been highlighted concerning class-specific manners.

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