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JASMONATE ZIM-DOMAIN Family Proteins: Important Nodes in JasmonicAcid-Abscisic Acid Crosstalk for Regulating Plant Response toDrought

Aarti Gupta, Mamta Bhardwaj, Lam‐Son Phan Tran

2021Current Protein and Peptide Science31 citationsDOI

Abstract

Plants modulate the metabolism of phytohormones and their signaling pathways under drought to regulate physiological and adaptive responses. Jasmonic acid (JA) is one of the major classes of phytohormones and has been found to potentially enhance plant tolerance to various abiotic stresses, including drought. The JASMONATE ZINC FINGER INFLORESCENCE MERISTEM (ZIM)-DOMAIN (JAZ) proteins are the negative regulators in the JA-signaling pathway. The JAZ protein family is explicit to plants and involved in the regulation of numerous biological processes, including drought-responsive mechanisms. In this review, we synthesize the mechanistic insight into the roles of JAZ proteins in the regulation of drought responses by connecting the JA-signaling with abscisic acid-signaling.

Topics & Concepts

Jasmonic acidAbscisic acidJasmonateCrosstalkCell biologyBiologySignal transductionMeristemArabidopsisBotanyBiochemistrySalicylic acidGeneOpticsMutantPhysicsPlant Parasitism and ResistancePlant Stress Responses and ToleranceInsect-Plant Interactions and Control
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