4.7 Article Book Chapter

Pleiotropy, plasticity, and the evolution of plant abiotic stress tolerance

Journal

YEAR IN EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
Volume 1206, Issue -, Pages 56-79

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2010.05703.x

Keywords

abiotic stress Arabidopsis; constraint; drought; physiology; pleiotropy; tolerance

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Progress in understanding the mechanisms of adaptive plant abiotic stress response has historically come from two separate fields Molecular biologists employ mutagenic screens, experimental manipulations, and controlled stress treatment to identify genes that, when perturbed, have fairly large effects on phenotype By contrast, quantitative and evolutionary geneticists generally study naturally occurring variants to inform multigenic models of trait architecture in an effort to predict for example the evolutionary response to selection We discuss five emerging themes from the molecular study of osmotic stress response the multigenic nature of adaptive response, the modular organization of response to specific cues, the pleiotropic effects of key signaling proteins, the integration of many environmental signals, and the abundant cross talk between signaling pathways We argue that these concepts can be incorporated into existing models of trait evolution and provide examples of what may constitute the molecular basis of plasticity and evolvability of abiotic stress response We conclude by considering future directions in the study of the functional molecular evolution of abiotic stress response that may facilitate new discoveries in molecular biology, evolutionary studies, and plant breeding

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