4.8 Article

How Plants Sense and Respond to Stressful Environments(1)([OPEN])

Journal

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 182, Issue 4, Pages 1624-1635

Publisher

AMER SOC PLANT BIOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.1104/pp.19.01464

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Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) consolidator grant (Sense2SurviveSalt) [724321]

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Major advances in the identification of cellular sensing mechanisms of abiotic stress show how plants perceive and respond to their environment. Plants are exposed to an ever-changing environment to which they have to adjust accordingly. Their response is tightly regulated by complex signaling pathways that all start with stimulus perception. Here, we give an overview of the latest developments in the perception of various abiotic stresses, including drought, salinity, flooding, and temperature stress. We discuss whether proposed perception mechanisms are true sensors, which is well established for some abiotic factors but not yet fully elucidated for others. In addition, we review the downstream cellular responses, many of which are shared by various stresses but result in stress-specific physiological and developmental output. New sensing mechanisms have been identified, including heat sensing by the photoreceptor phytochrome B, salt sensing by glycosylinositol phosphorylceramide sphingolipids, and drought sensing by the specific calcium influx channel OSCA1. The simultaneous occurrence of multiple stress conditions shows characteristic downstream signaling signatures that were previously considered general signaling responses. The integration of sensing of multiple stress conditions and subsequent signaling responses is a promising venue for future research to improve the understanding of plant abiotic stress perception.

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