4.7 Review

Presence and future of plant phenotyping approaches in biostimulant research and development

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
Volume 73, Issue 15, Pages 5199-5212

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erac275

Keywords

High-throughput screening; mechanism of action; mode of action; -omics; plant biostimulants; plant breeding; plant phenotyping; sensors

Categories

Funding

  1. ERDF project `Plants as a tool for sustainable global development' [CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000827]
  2. Ministry of Education,Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic

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Commercial interest in biostimulants is increasing, along with the demand for efficient scientific methods to develop new products and understand their mechanisms of action. This review focuses on applying phenotyping approaches in biostimulant research and development, summarizing how phenotyping helped identify new biostimulants and describing their biological activity and mechanisms. High-throughput plant phenotyping can accelerate the development and characterization of new biostimulants.
Commercial interest in biostimulants as a tool for sustainable green economics and agriculture concepts is on a steep rise, being followed by increasing demand to employ efficient scientific methods to develop new products and understand their mechanisms of action. Biostimulants represent a highly diverse group of agents derived from various natural sources. Regardless of their nutrition content and composition, they are classified by their ability to improve crop performance through enhanced nutrient use efficiency, abiotic stress tolerance, and quality of crops. Numerous reports have described modern, non-invasive sensor-based phenotyping methods in plant research. This review focuses on applying phenotyping approaches in biostimulant research and development, and maps the evolution of interaction of these two intensively growing domains. How phenotyping served to identify new biostimulants, the description of their biological activity, and the mechanism/mode of action are summarized. Special attention is dedicated to the indoor high-throughput methods using model plants suitable for biostimulant screening and developmental pipelines, and high-precision approaches used to determine biostimulant activity. The need for a complex method of testing biostimulants as multicomponent products through integrating other -omic approaches followed by advanced statistical/mathematical tools is emphasized. High-throughput plant phenotyping can accelerate the development and characterization of new biostimulants. Contrarily, biostimulants can bring new challenges to plant phenotyping to develop complex approaches integrating -omics and data analysis.

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