Abiotic stress signal transduction in plants: Molecular
and genetic perspectives.
Xiong L, Zhu JK.
Department of Plant Sciences, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA.
Low temperature, drought and salinity are major adverse environmental factors
that limit plant productivity. Understanding the mechanisms by which plants
perceive and transduce these stress signals to initiate adaptive responses is
essential for engineering stress-tolerant crop plants. Molecular and biochemical
studies suggest that abiotic stress signaling in plants involves
receptor-coupled phosphorelay, phosphoinositol-induced Ca2+ changes, mitogen-activated
protein kinase cascades and transcriptional activation of stress-responsive
genes. In addition, protein posttranslational modifications and adapter or
scaffold-mediated protein-protein interactions are also important in abiotic
stress signal transduction. Most of these signaling modules, however, have not
been genetically established to function in plant abiotic stress signal
transduction. To overcome the scarcity of abiotic stress-specific phenotypes for
conventional genetic screens, molecular genetic analysis using stress-responsive
promoter-driven reporter is suggested as an alternative approach to genetically
dissect abiotic stress signaling networks in plants.