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Plant responses to climate change: metabolic changes under combined abiotic stresses

Sara I. Zandalinas, Damián Balfagón, ‪Aurelio Gómez‐Cadenas, Ron Mittler

2022Journal of Experimental Botany276 citationsDOI

Abstract

Climate change is predicted to increase the frequency and intensity of abiotic stress combinations that negatively impact plants and pose a serious threat to crop yield and food supply. Plants respond to episodes of stress combination by activating specific physiological and molecular responses, as well as by adjusting different metabolic pathways, to mitigate the negative effects of the stress combination on plant growth, development, and reproduction. Plants synthesize a wide range of metabolites that regulate many aspects of plant growth and development, as well as plant responses to stress. Although metabolic responses to individual abiotic stresses have been studied extensively in different plant species, recent efforts have been directed at understanding metabolic responses that occur when different abiotic factors are combined. In this review we examine recent studies of metabolomic changes under stress combination in different plants and suggest new avenues for the development of stress combination-resilient crops based on metabolites as breeding targets.

Topics & Concepts

Abiotic componentAbiotic stressBiologyMetabolomicsPlant reproductionPlant growthPlant physiologyEcologyBotanyBioinformaticsBiochemistryPollinationPollenGenePlant Stress Responses and TolerancePlant biochemistry and biosynthesisGABA and Rice Research
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