Stress-tolerant Wild Plants: a Source of Knowledge and Biotechnological Tools for the Genetic Improvement of Stress Tolerance in Crop Plants

被引:0
作者
Boscaiu, Monica [2 ]
Donat, Pilar [3 ]
Llinares, Josep [3 ]
Vicente, Oscar [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Politecn Valencia, IBMCP, CSIC, CPI, Valencia 46022, Spain
[2] Univ Politecn Valencia, IAM, CPI, Valencia 46022, Spain
[3] Univ Politecn Valencia, Inst Invest Gest Integrada Zonas Costeras IGIC, Valencia 46730, Spain
关键词
abiotic stress; biotech crops; climate change; crop productivity; drought tolerance; salt tolerance; stress-tolerance genes; SALINITY TOLERANCE; SALT TOLERANCE; ABIOTIC STRESS; ARABIDOPSIS;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Over the next few decades we must boost crop productivity if we arc to feed a growing world population, which will reach more than 9x10(9) people by 2050; and we should do it in the frame of a sustainable agriculture, with an increasing scarcity of new arable land and of water for irrigation. For all important crops, average yields are only a fraction-somewhere between 20% and 50%-of record yields; these losses are mostly due to drought and high soil salinity, environmental conditions which will worsen in many regions because of global climate change. Therefore, the simplest way to increase agricultural productivity would be to improve the abiotic stress tolerance of crops. Considering the limitations of traditional plant breeding, the most promising strategy to achieve this goal will rely on the generation of transgenic plants expressing genes conferring tolerance. However, advances using this approach have been slow, since it requires a deep understanding of the mechanisms of plant stress tolerance, which are still largely unknown. Paradoxically, most studies on the responses of plants to abiotic stress have been performed using stress-sensitive species-such as Arabidopsis thaliana-although there are plants (halophytes, gypsophytes, xerophytes) adapted to extremely harsh environmental conditions in their natural habitats. We propose these wild stress-tolerant species as more suitable models to investigate these mechanisms, as well as a possible source of biotechnological tools ('stress tolerance' genes, stress-inducible promoters) for the genetic engineering of stress tolerance in crop plants.
引用
收藏
页码:323 / 327
页数:5
相关论文
共 19 条
[1]   Biotechnological approach of improving plant salt tolerance using antioxidants as markers [J].
Ashraf, M. .
BIOTECHNOLOGY ADVANCES, 2009, 27 (01) :84-93
[2]  
Bourgon L., 2007, Bulletin of University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine Cluj-Napoca. Horticulture, V64, P1
[3]   PLANT PRODUCTIVITY AND ENVIRONMENT [J].
BOYER, JS .
SCIENCE, 1982, 218 (4571) :443-448
[4]   Bacterial RNA chaperones confer abiotic stress tolerance in plants and improved grain yield in maize under water-limited conditions [J].
Castiglioni, Paolo ;
Warner, Dave ;
Bensen, Robert J. ;
Anstrom, Don C. ;
Harrison, Jay ;
Stoecker, Martin ;
Abad, Mark ;
Kumar, Ganesh ;
Salvador, Sara ;
D'Ordine, Robert ;
Navarro, Santiago ;
Back, Stephanie ;
Fernandes, Mary ;
Targolli, Jayaprakash ;
Dasgupta, Santanu ;
Bonin, Christopher ;
Luethy, Michael H. ;
Heard, Jacqueline E. .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2008, 147 (02) :446-455
[5]  
DB Climate Change Advisors, 2009, INV AGR FAR REACH CH
[6]   Salinity tolerance in halophytes [J].
Flowers, Timothy J. ;
Colmer, Timothy D. .
NEW PHYTOLOGIST, 2008, 179 (04) :945-963
[7]   Expression of Arabidopsis SR-like splicing proteins confers salt tolerance to yeast and transgenic plants [J].
Forment, J ;
Naranjo, MA ;
Roldán, M ;
Serrano, R ;
Vicente, O .
PLANT JOURNAL, 2002, 30 (05) :511-519
[8]  
Hussain T. M., 2008, Biotechnology and Molecular Biology Reviews, V3, P008
[9]   Shoot Na+ Exclusion and Increased Salinity Tolerance Engineered by Cell Type-Specific Alteration of Na+ Transport in Arabidopsis [J].
Moller, Inge S. ;
Gilliham, Matthew ;
Jha, Deepa ;
Mayo, Gwenda M. ;
Roy, Stuart J. ;
Coates, Juliet C. ;
Haseloff, Jim ;
Tester, Mark .
PLANT CELL, 2009, 21 (07) :2163-2178
[10]   Comparative physiology of salt and water stress [J].
Munns, R .
PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT, 2002, 25 (02) :239-250