4.6 Article

Role of Basal ABA in Plant Growth and Development

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12121936

Keywords

ABA; chloroplast biogenesis; hyponastic growth; skotomorphogenesis; stomata; cutin; wax; suberin; xylem; hormone crosstalk; ethylene

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. Canada First Research Excellence Fund (CFREF) [P2IRC]
  3. [RGPIN-2019-04144]

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ABA plays a crucial role in regulating various aspects of plant growth and development, with both promotive and inhibitive effects depending on factors like concentrations, tissues, and environmental conditions. It influences plant growth by regulating local growth, chloroplast biogenesis, stomatal development, and other processes. Hormone crosstalk is also important in the growth and developmental processes regulated by ABA.
Abscisic acid (ABA) regulates various aspects of plant physiology, including promoting seed dormancy and adaptive responses to abiotic and biotic stresses. In addition, ABA plays an im-portant role in growth and development under non-stressed conditions. This review summarizes phenotypes of ABA biosynthesis and signaling mutants to clarify the roles of basal ABA in growth and development. The promotive and inhibitive actions of ABA in growth are characterized by stunted and enhanced growth of ABA-deficient and insensitive mutants, respectively. Growth regulation by ABA is both promotive and inhibitive, depending on the context, such as concentrations, tissues, and environmental conditions. Basal ABA regulates local growth including hyponastic growth, skotomorphogenesis and lateral root growth. At the cellular level, basal ABA is essential for proper chloroplast biogenesis, central metabolism, and expression of cell-cycle genes. Basal ABA also regulates epidermis development in the shoot, by inhibiting stomatal development, and deposition of hydrophobic polymers like a cuticular wax layer covering the leaf surface. In the root, basal ABA is involved in xylem differentiation and suberization of the endodermis. Hormone crosstalk plays key roles in growth and developmental processes regulated by ABA. Phenotypes of ABA-deficient and insensitive mutants indicate prominent functions of basal ABA in plant growth and development.

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