Impact of salinity stress on cotton and opportunities for improvement through conventional and biotechnological approaches

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作者
Muhammad Tanees Chaudhary
Sajid Majeed
Iqrar Ahmad Rana
Zulfiqar Ali
Yinhua Jia
Xiongming Du
Lori Hinze
Muhammad Tehseen Azhar
机构
[1] Horticultural Research Institute,Federal Seed Certification and Registration Department
[2] National Agricultural Research Centre,Center of Agricultural Biochemistry and Biotechnology/Centre of Advanced Studies in Agriculture and Food Security
[3] Ministry of National Food Security and Research,Department of Plant Breeding and Genetics
[4] University of Agriculture,School of Agriculture Sciences
[5] University of Agriculture,undefined
[6] State Key Laboratory of Cotton Biology,undefined
[7] Institute of Cotton Research Chinese Academy of Agricultural Science,undefined
[8] US Department of Agriculture,undefined
[9] Southern Plains Agricultural Research Center,undefined
[10] Zhengzhou University,undefined
来源
BMC Plant Biology | / 24卷
关键词
Biotechnology; Cotton; Development; Morphological; Physiological; Salinity;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Excess salinity can affect the growth and development of all plants. Salinization jeopardizes agroecosystems, induces oxidative reactions in most cultivated plants and reduces biomass which affects crop yield. Some plants are affected more than others, depending upon their ability to endure the effects of salt stress. Cotton is moderately tolerant to salt stress among cultivated crops. The fundamental tenet of plant breeding is genetic heterogeneity in available germplasm for acquired characteristics. Variation for salinity tolerance enhancing parameters (morphological, physiological and biochemical) is a pre-requisite for the development of salt tolerant cotton germplasm followed by indirect selection or hybridization programs. There has been a limited success in the development of salt tolerant genotypes because this trait depends on several factors, and these factors as well as their interactions are not completely understood. However, advances in biochemical and molecular techniques have made it possible to explore the complexity of salt tolerance through transcriptomic profiling. The focus of this article is to discuss the issue of salt stress in crop plants, how it alters the physiology and morphology of the cotton crop, and breeding strategies for the development of salinity tolerance in cotton germplasm.
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