4.7 Review

MicroRNA-mediated bioengineering for climate-resilience in crops

Journal

BIOENGINEERED
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages 10430-10456

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/21655979.2021.1997244

Keywords

Bioengineering; climate change; crop improvement; environmental stress; gene expression; combined stress; miRNA

Funding

  1. DST-FIST [SR/FST/COLLEGE-/19/568]
  2. DBT Star Status [BT/HRD/11/030/2012]

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Global projections indicate severe impacts on food security due to climate change and dynamic environmental perturbations, particularly affecting crop yield and quality. Plant stress tolerance can be achieved through unique miRNAs such as Os-miR408 and OsmiR535A for drought and salinity tolerance, respectively. Up-regulation or knock-out of miRNAs is a promising strategy for developing bioengineered climate-smart crops that can withstand stressful environments with minimal yield penalties.
Global projections on the climate change and the dynamic environmental perturbations indicate severe impacts on food security in general, and crop yield, vigor and the quality of produce in particular. Sessile plants respond to environmental challenges such as salt, drought, temperature, heavy metals at transcriptional and/or post-transcriptional levels through the stress-regulated network of pathways including transcription factors, proteins and the small non-coding endogenous RNAs. Amongs these, the miRNAs have gained unprecedented attention in recent years as key regulators for modulating gene expression in plants under stress. Hence, tailoring of miRNAs and their target pathways presents a promising strategy for developing multiple stress-tolerant crops. Plant stress tolerance has been successfully achieved through the over expression of microRNAs such as Os-miR408, Hv-miR82 for drought tolerance; OsmiR535A and artificial DST miRNA for salinity tolerance; and OsmiR535 and miR156 for combined drought and salt stress. Examples of miR408 overexpression also showed improved efficiency of irradiation utilization and carbon dioxide fixation in crop plants. Through this review, we present the current understanding about plant miRNAs, their roles in plant growth and stress-responses, the modern toolbox for identification, characterization and validation of miRNAs and their target genes including in silico tools, machine learning and artificial intelligence. Various approaches for up-regulation or knock-out of miRNAs have been discussed. The main emphasis has been given to the exploration of miRNAs for development of bioengineered climate-smart crops that can withstand changing climates and stressful environments, including combination of stresses, with very less or no yield penalties.

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