4.7 Review

Exploration of Epigenetics for Improvement of Drought and Other Stress Resistance in Crops: A Review

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10061226

Keywords

epigenetics; drought tolerance; novel plant breeding techniques; stress tolerance improvement

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32060502, 31960442]
  2. Special Fund for Discipline Construction of Gansu Agricultural University [GAU-XKJS-2018-085, GAU-XKJS-2018-084]
  3. Special Fund for Talents of Gansu Agricultural University [2017RCZX-44]
  4. Lanzhou Science and Technology Project [2017-RC-39]
  5. LZJTU fund [2017007, 2018067]

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Crop plants adapt to biotic and abiotic stresses by expressing specific genes, and epigenetic changes enable them to remember past stress events for better future stress responses. Plant stress memory enhances plants' ability to cope with challenges efficiently, contributing to increased yield potential in changing climatic conditions.
Crop plants often have challenges of biotic and abiotic stresses, and they adapt sophisticated ways to acclimate and cope with these through the expression of specific genes. Changes in chromatin, histone, and DNA mostly serve the purpose of combating challenges and ensuring the survival of plants in stressful environments. Epigenetic changes, due to environmental stress, enable plants to remember a past stress event in order to deal with such challenges in the future. This heritable memory, called plant stress memory, enables plants to respond against stresses in a better and efficient way, not only for the current plant in prevailing situations but also for future generations. Development of stress resistance in plants for increasing the yield potential and stability has always been a traditional objective of breeders for crop improvement through integrated breeding approaches. The application of epigenetics for improvements in complex traits in tetraploid and some other field crops has been unclear. An improved understanding of epigenetics and stress memory applications will contribute to the development of strategies to incorporate them into breeding for complex agronomic traits. The insight in the application of novel plant breeding techniques (NPBTs) has opened a new plethora of options among plant scientists to develop germplasms for stress tolerance. This review summarizes and discusses plant stress memory at the intergenerational and transgenerational levels, mechanisms involved in stress memory, exploitation of induced and natural epigenetic changes, and genome editing technologies with their future possible applications, in the breeding of crops for abiotic stress tolerance to increase the yield for zero hunger goals achievement on a sustainable basis in the changing climatic era.

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