4.7 Review

Engineering Drought Resistance in Forest Trees

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2018.01875

Keywords

water limitation; antioxidative systems; genetic engineering; forest tree species; isohydric; anisohydric; avoidance; tolerance

Categories

Funding

  1. European Commission [FP7-311929]
  2. Brain Gain (Rientro dei Cervelli) MIUR professorship
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31770643, 31570587]
  4. Beijing Municipal Natural Science Foundation [6182030]
  5. Research Project of the Chinese Ministry of Education [113013A]
  6. Program of Introducing Talents of Discipline to Universities (111 Project) [B13007]
  7. Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Tree Breeding by Molecular Design (Beijing Forestry University)

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Climatic stresses limit plant growth and productivity. In the past decade, tree improvement programs were mainly focused on yield but it is obvious that enhanced stress resistance is also required. In this review we highlight important drought avoidance and tolerance mechanisms in forest trees. Genomes of economically important trees species with divergent resistance mechanisms can now be exploited to uncover the mechanistic basis of long-term drought adaptation at the whole plant level. Molecular tree physiology indicates that osmotic adjustment, antioxidative defense and increased water use efficiency are important targets for enhanced drought tolerance at the cellular and tissue level. Recent biotechnological approaches focused on overexpression of genes involved in stress sensing and signaling, such as the abscisic acid core pathway, and down-stream transcription factors. By this strategy, a suite of defense systems was recruited, generally enhancing drought and salt stress tolerance under laboratory conditions. However, field studies are still scarce. Under field conditions trees are exposed to combinations of stresses that vary in duration and magnitude. Variable stresses may overrule the positive effect achieved by engineering an individual defense pathway. To assess the usability of distinct modi fications, large-scale experimental field studies in different environments are necessary. To optimize the balance between growth and defense, the use of stress-inducible promoters may be useful. Future improvement programs for drought resistance will bene fit from a better understanding of the intricate networks that ameliorate molecular and ecological traits of forest trees.

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