4.6 Review

Moving Beyond DNA Sequence to Improve Plant Stress Responses

Journal

FRONTIERS IN GENETICS
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2022.874648

Keywords

biotechnology; epigenetics; food security; abiotic stress; biotic stress; stress memory

Funding

  1. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, United States (The Tropical Legumes III project) [OPP1114827]
  2. Australia-India Strategic Research Fund from the Department of Biotechnology, Government of India

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Plant epigenetics has great potential for improving plant adaptation to stress factors, but a thorough understanding and assessment of the functional relevance of epigenetic modifications are required. Modern technologies for profiling and engineering plants at the genome-wide scale have provided new insights into the mechanisms of epigenetic modifications in response to stress conditions and their contribution to plant phenotypes. Understanding the patterns of epigenetic variations can help develop breeding strategies for improving crop performance under stressed scenarios.
Plants offer a habitat for a range of interactions to occur among different stress factors. Epigenetics has become the most promising functional genomics tool, with huge potential for improving plant adaptation to biotic and abiotic stresses. Advances in plant molecular biology have dramatically changed our understanding of the molecular mechanisms that control these interactions, and plant epigenetics has attracted great interest in this context. Accumulating literature substantiates the crucial role of epigenetics in the diversity of plant responses that can be harnessed to accelerate the progress of crop improvement. However, harnessing epigenetics to its full potential will require a thorough understanding of the epigenetic modifications and assessing the functional relevance of these variants. The modern technologies of profiling and engineering plants at genome-wide scale provide new horizons to elucidate how epigenetic modifications occur in plants in response to stress conditions. This review summarizes recent progress on understanding the epigenetic regulation of plant stress responses, methods to detect genome-wide epigenetic modifications, and disentangling their contributions to plant phenotypes from other sources of variations. Key epigenetic mechanisms underlying stress memory are highlighted. Linking plant response with the patterns of epigenetic variations would help devise breeding strategies for improving crop performance under stressed scenarios.

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