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Osmoregulation and its actions during the drought stress in plants

Münir Öztürk, Bengü Türkyılmaz Ünal, Pedro García‐Caparrós, Anum Khursheed, Alvina Gul, Mirza Hasanuzzaman

2020Physiologia Plantarum765 citationsDOI

Abstract

Drought stress, which causes a decline in quality and quantity of crop yields, has become more accentuated these days due to climatic change. Serious measures need to be taken to increase the tolerance of crop plants to acute drought conditions likely to occur due to global warming. Drought stress causes many physiological and biochemical changes in plants, rendering the maintenance of osmotic adjustment highly crucial. The degree of plant resistance to drought varies with plant species and cultivars, phenological stages of the plant, and the duration of plant exposure to the stress. Osmoregulation in plants under low water potential relies on synthesis and accumulation of osmoprotectants or osmolytes such as soluble proteins, sugars, and sugar alcohols, quaternary ammonium compounds, and amino acids, like proline. This review highlights the role of osmolytes in water-stressed plants and of enzymes entailed in their metabolism. It will be useful, especially for researchers working on the development of drought-resistant crops by using the metabolic-engineering techniques.

Topics & Concepts

OsmolyteOsmoregulationOsmoprotectantDrought toleranceProlineSugarBiologyPlant physiologyAgronomyCropAcclimatizationBotanyEcologyBiochemistryAmino acidSalinityPlant Stress Responses and TolerancePlant nutrient uptake and metabolismPlant responses to water stress
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