4.7 Review

High temperature stress responses and wheat: Impacts and alleviation strategies

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL AND EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 190, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envexpbot.2021.104589

Keywords

Bread wheat; Crop stress resilience; High temperture stress; Metabolic profiling; Omics investigation; Stress-adaptive responses; Thermotolerance

Funding

  1. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), Govt. of India [38 (1487) /19/EMR-II]
  2. University Grant Commission (UGC), Govt. of India
  3. CSIR [9063-A]

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The article discusses the impacts of global warming on crop production, particularly on wheat production. It focuses on understanding the genetic and molecular basis of crop plants' responses to heat stress, particularly wheat, and current strategies and technologies for developing thermotolerant varieties.
Over the past century, the average surface temperature and recurrent heatwaves have been steadily rising, affecting the yield potential of most food crops including bread wheat, the second most important caloric source, but is particularly vulnerable to the impacts of elevated temperatures. Significantly, the past decade has witnessed tremendous advancements in multiomics approaches to extract the key regulators that influence the adaptive responses to high temperature stress (HTS). With the help of genetic engineering technologies, trans genic wheat plants have been developed showing resistance to HTS without hampering productivity. In this review, we described the effect of rising temperature at a global scale and the drastic impacts on crops, particularly on wheat production. Also, this review is focused on accomplishing a deeper understanding of the genetic and molecular basis of HTS responses of crop plants, wheat in particular along with current strategies and technologies to generate thermotolerant varieties. Collective strategy and identified thresholds of HTS tolerance and susceptibility will contribute to the value-added modelling of wheat growth and yield under predictable future climate conditions.

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