4.7 Review

Smart reprograming of plants against salinity stress using modern biotechnological tools

Journal

CRITICAL REVIEWS IN BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 43, Issue 7, Pages 1035-1062

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/07388551.2022.2093695

Keywords

Abiotic stress; climate change; crop improvement; genome editing; omics approaches; zero hunger

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Climate change leads to various environmental stresses, including soil salinity, which negatively affects agricultural productivity. Plants respond to salinity stress by regulating ion homeostasis, inducing antioxidant defense systems, and producing phytohormones and osmoprotectants. Enhancing salt tolerance in plants is crucial for sustaining global agricultural productivity.
Climate change gives rise to numerous environmental stresses, including soil salinity. Salinity/salt stress is the second biggest abiotic factor affecting agricultural productivity worldwide by damaging numerous physiological, biochemical, and molecular processes. In particular, salinity affects plant growth, development, and productivity. Salinity responses include modulation of ion homeostasis, antioxidant defense system induction, and biosynthesis of numerous phytohormones and osmoprotectants to protect plants from osmotic stress by decreasing ion toxicity and augmented reactive oxygen species scavenging. As most crop plants are sensitive to salinity, improving salt tolerance is crucial in sustaining global agricultural productivity. In response to salinity, plants trigger stress-related genes, proteins, and the accumulation of metabolites to cope with the adverse consequence of salinity. Therefore, this review presents an overview of salinity stress in crop plants. We highlight advances in modern biotechnological tools, such as omics (genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics) approaches and different genome editing tools (ZFN, TALEN, and CRISPR/Cas system) for improving salinity tolerance in plants and accomplish the goal of zero hunger, a worldwide sustainable development goal proposed by the FAO.

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