Mechanism of Plant Hormone Signaling under Stress

Girdhar K. Pandey

Wiley-Blackwell

1

2017

en

9781118888964

iLEIO | PCs Apple App Store Android no Google Play

Plant hormone signaling plays an important role in many physiological and developmental processes including stress response. With the advent of new post-genomic molecular techniques, the potential for increasing our understanding of the impact of hormone signaling on gene expression and adaptive processes has never been higher. Unlocking the molecular underpinnings of these processes shows great promise for the development of new plant biotechnologies and improved crop varieties.

The topics included in this book emphasize on genomics and functional genomics aspects, to understand the global and whole genome level changes upon particular stress conditions. With the functional genomics tools, the mechanism of phytohormone signaling and their target genes can be defined in a more systematic manner. The integrated analysis of phytohormone signaling under single or multiple stress conditions may prove exceptional to design stress tolerant crop plants in the field conditions.

Bringing together the latest advances, as well as the work being done to apply these findings to plant and crop science, Mechanism of Plant Hormone Signaling Under Stress will prove extremely useful to plant and stress biologists, plant biotechnology researchers, as well as students and teachers.

About the Editor
Girdhar K. Pandey, Professor, Department of Plant Molecular Biology, University of Delhi South Campus, New Delhi, India

About the author

List of Contributors

Preface

Part I: Action of phytohormones in stress

Chapter 1: Auxin as a mediator of abiotic stress responses
Branka Salopek-Sondi, Iva Pavlovi?, Ana Smolko, Dunja Šamec

1.1. Introduction

1.2. Auxin: short overview of appearance, metabolism, transport and analyticsToluene production as a case study

1.3. How auxin homeostasis shifts upon diverse abiotic stresses?

1.4. How does auxin signaling respond to abiotic stress?

1.5. Auxin and redox state during abiotic stress

1.6. Auxin-stress hormones crosstalk in stress condition

1.7. Promiscuous protein players of plant adaptation: biochemical and structural views

1.8. Conclusion

References

Chapter 2 : Mechanism of Auxin mediated stress signaling in plants
Lekshmy S, Krishna K G, Jha S.K, Sairam R.K

2.1 Introduction

2.2 Auxin biosynthesis, homeostasis and signaling

2.3 Auxin mediated stress responses in model and crop plants

2.4 Regulation of root system architecture under drought and nutrient stresses

2.5 Conclusions and future perspectives

References

Chapter 3: Integrating the Knowledge of Auxin Homeostasis with Stress Tolerance in Plants
Shivani Saini, Isha Sharma, Pratap Kumar Pati

3.1 Introduction

3.2 Auxin transport and its role in plant stress

3.3 Auxin signaling and its role in plant stress

3.4 Auxin conjugation and degradation and its role in plant stress

3.5 Conclusion

References

Chapter 4:  Cytokinin signaling in plant response to abiotic stresses
Nguyen Binh Anh Thu, Xuan Lan Thi Hoang, Mai Thuy Truc, Saad Sulieman, Nguyen Phuong Thao, Lam-Son Phan Tran

4.1. Introduction

4.2. CK metabolism

4.3. The components of CK signaling pathway

4.4. CK signaling in plant responses to the abiotic stresses

4.5. Genetic engineering of CK content for improvement of plant tolerance to abiotic stresses

4.6. Conclusions

References

Chapter 5:  Cross talk between gibberellins and abiotic stress tolerance machinery in plants
Ashutosh Sharan, Jeremy Dkhar, Sneh Lata Singla-Pareek, Ashwani Pareek

5.1. Introduction 

5.2. Gibberellins: biosynthesis, transport and signaling

5.3. GA metabolism and signaling during abiotic stress

5.4. Cross-talk between GA and other plant hormones in response to abiotic stresses

5.5. Applications in crop improvement

5.6. Conclusion

Acknowledgement

References  

Chapter 6: The crosstalk of GA and JA: a fine-tuning on balance of plant growth, development and defense
Yuge Li, and Xingliang Hou

6.1. Introduction

6.2. GA pathway in plants

6.3. JA pathway in plants

6.4. GA antagonizes JA-mediated defense

6.5. JA inhibits GA-mediated growth

6.6. GA and JA synergistically mediate plant development

6.7. Conclusion

References

Chapter 7: JASMONATE SIGNALLING AND STRESS MANAGEMENT IN PLANTS.
Sirhindi Geetika, Mushtaq Ruqia, Sharma Poonam, Kaur Harpreet and Ahmad Mir Mudaser

7.1. Introduction

7.2. Ja Biosynthesis And Metabolic Fate

7.3. Ja Signaling Network

7.4. Physiological Role Of Jas

7.5. Ja Regulated Stress Responses

7.6. Conclusion

Bibliography

References

Chapter 8: Mechanism of ABA signaling in response to abiotic stress in plants
Ankush Ashok Saddhea, Kundan Kumar and Padmanabh Dwivedi

8.1. Introduction

8.2. Signal perception and ABA receptor

8.3. Negative regulator of ABA signaling: Protein phosphatase 2C (PP2C)

8.4. Positive regulator of ABA signaling: SnRK2

8.5. ABA signaling regulating transcription factor

8.6. Cross talks between various ABA responsive pathways in abiotic stress

8.7. Summary and future prospects

References

Chapter 9:  Abscisic acid signaling and involvement of mitogen activated protein kinases and calcium-dependent protein kinases during plant abiotic stress
Aryadeep Roychoudhury, Aditya Banerjee

9.1. Introduction

9.2. ABA signaling in plants

9.3. The signalosome and signaling responses mediated by ABA: Structural alterations in ABA by PYR/PYL/RCAR

9.4. Structural alterations during PP2C inhibition by ABA

9.5. The abi1-1 mutation mystery solved

9.6. Basic leucine zipper (bZIP) TFs in ABA signaling 

9.7. Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascades and regulation of downstream signaling

9.8. Calcium Dependent Protein Kinases (CDPKs): a group of MAPK

9.9. MAPK-CDPK cross-talk

9.10. Conclusion and future perspectives

References

Chapter 10:  Abscisic acid activates pathogenesis-related defence gene signaling in Lentil
Rebecca Ford, David Tan, Niloofar Vaghefi, Barkat Mustafa

10.1. Plant host defence mechanisms

10.2. The role of plant hormones in pathogen defense

10.3. The lentil-Ascochyta lentis pathosystem

10.4. Key defense-related genes involved in Ascochyta lentis defense

10.5. The effect of exogenous hormone treatment on PR4 and PR10 transcription in lentil

10.6. Conclusion

References

Chapter 11: Signaling and modulation of non-coding RNAs in plants byAbscisic Acid (ABA)
Raj Kumar Joshi, Swati Megha, Urmila Basu, Nat N.V.Kav

11.1. Introduction

11.2. Biogenesis of non-coding RNAs in plant

11.3. Mode of action ofncRNAs in plants

11.4. ABA signaling in plants

11.5. Non-coding RNAs and ABA response

11.6. Conclusion and future prospects

References

Chapter 12: Ethylene and stress mediated signaling in plants: a molecular perspective
Priyanka Agarwal, Gitanjali Jiwani, Ashima Khurana, Pankaj Gupta and Rahul Kumar

12.1. Introduction

12.2. Type of stress

12.3. Overview of stress signaling

12.4. Perception of stress

12.5. Action of different secondary messengers

12.6. Ca2+ as an intermediate signal molecule

12.7. Role of MAPK phosphoproteins in stress signaling

12.8. Role of ethylene during stress

12.9. Role of ethylene in abiotic stress

12.10. Role of ethylene in biotic stress

12.11. Role of ABA in stress

12.12. Role of other phytohormones in stress

12.13. Conclusion

Acknowledgement

References

Chapter 13: Regulatory Function of Ethylene in Plant Responses to Drought, Cold and Salt Stresses
Haixia Pei, Honglin Wang, Lijuan Wang, Fangfang Zheng and Chun-Hai Dong

13.1. Functional Roles of Ethylene in Plant Drought Tolerance

13.2. Ethylene Signaling in Plant Cold Tolerance

13.3. Ethylene Signaling and Response to Salt Stress

13.4. Conclusion

References

Chapter 14: Plant nitric oxide signaling under environmental stresses
Ione Salgado, Halley Caixeta Oliveira and Marília Gaspar

14.1. Introduction

14.2. Mechanisms of NO action in Plants

14.3. The Control of NO Homeostasis in Plants

14.4. NO and the Response to Abiotic Stresses

14.5. Conclusions and Future Prospects

References

Chapter 15: Cell Mechanisms of Nitric Oxide Signaling in Plants under Abiotic Stress Conditions
Yuliya A. Krasylenko, Alla I. Yemets and Yaroslav B. Blume

15.1. Introduction

15.2. Duality of RNS: key secondary messengers in plant cell versus nitrosative stress agents

15.3. Tyrosine nitration as a hallmark of nitrosative stress and regulatory posttranslational modification

15.4. NO and environmental abiotic challenges

15.5. Conclusions and future perspectives

References

Chapter 16: S-nitrosylation in abiotic stress in plants and nitric oxide interaction with plant hormones
Ankita Sehrawat and Renu Deswal

16.1. Introduction

16.2. S-nitrosylation in abiotic stress

16.3. 2.5 Cadmium stress and 2,4-dichlorophenoxy acetic acid (2,4-D) stress

16.4. Nitric oxide and plant hormones interaction

16.5. Conclusions and Future area of research

References

Chapter 17: Salicylic Acid signaling and its role upon responses to stresses in plants
Pingzhi Zhao, Gui-Hua Lu, Yong-Hua Yang

17.1. Introduction

17.2. Salicylic acid biosynthesis and metabolism in plants

17.3. Salicylic acid: a central molecule in plant responses to stress

17.4. Salicylic acid in relation to other phytohormones in response to plant stress status

17.5.Conclusion

References

Chapter 18: Glucose and brassinosteroid signaling network in controlling plant growth and development under different environmental conditions
Manjul Singh, Aditi Gupta and Ashverya Laxmi

18.1. Introduction.

18.2. Glucose homeostasis and signaling in plants

18.3. Brassinosteroid biosynthesis and signalling

18.4. Role of Glc in plant adaptation to changing environmental conditions

18.5. Role of BR in plant adaptation to changing environmental conditions

18.6. Glc-BR crosstalk and its adaptive significance in plant development

18.7. Conclusion and future prospective

References

INDEX

About the author

List of Contributors

Preface

Part II: Interaction of other components with phytohormone

Chapter 1: Interaction between hormone and redox signaling in plants: Divergent pathways and convergent roles
Srivastava AK, Redij T, Sharma B, Suprasanna

1.1. Introduction

1.2. Redox-hormone crosstalk in plants

1.3. Auxin

1.4. Abscisic acid

1.5. Ethylene

1.6. Jasmonic acid

1.7. Salicylic acid

1.8. Brassinosteroid

1.9. Conclusion and future perspectives

References

Chapter 2: Redox regulatory networks in response to biotic stress in plants: A new insight through chickpea-Fusarium interplay
Anirban Bhar, Sumanti Gupta, Moniya Chatterjee and Sampa Das

2.1. Introduction

2.2. Production and scavenging of ROS: The balance vs. Perturbations

2.3. Role of ROS in plants: ease and disease

2.4. Reactive oxygen species networks in plants

2.5. ROS signaling in Chickpea- Fusarium interplay

2.6. Concluding remarks

2.7. Acknowledgements

References

Chapter 3: Ca2+ the Miracle Molecule in Plant Hormone Signaling during Abiotic Stress
Swatismita Dhar Ray

3.1. Introduction 

3.2. Intricacy Of Hormonal Signaling In Abiotic Stress

3.3. Ca2+ Regulated Hormonal Signaling 

3.4. Calreticulin (Crt) 

3.5. Conclusion 

Acknowledgement 

References 

Chapter 4: Phosphoglycerolipid signaling in response to hormones under stress
Pokotylo Igor, Janda Martin, Kalachova Tetiana, Zachowski Alain & Ruelland Eric

4.1.  Main players in the phosphoglycerolipid signaling machinery

4.2. Lipid signaling, an important component of plant stress responses

4.3. Involvement of phosphoglycerolipids in phytohormone signaling

4.4 Stresses can affect the responses to hormones by altering the phosphoglycerolipid machinery

4.5 Conclusion

References

Chapter 5: The Role of Plant Cytoskeleton on Phytohormone Signaling under Abiotic and Biotic Stresses
Yaroslav B. Blume, Yuliya A. Krasylenko and Alla I. Yemets

5.1. Introduction

5.2. Phytohormone-mediated perception of abiotic factors via cytoskeleton

5.3. Cytoskeleton regulation in plant interactions with pathogens/symbionts: jasmonic,  salycilic acids and strigolactones

5.4. Conclusions and Future Perspectives

Acknowledgements.

References

Chapter 6: Proteins in phytohormone signaling pathways for abiotic stress in plants
Sasikiran Reddy Sangireddy, Zhujia Ye, Sarabjit Bhatti, Xiao Bo Pei, Muhammad Younas Khan Barozai, Theodore Thannhauser, Suping Zhou

6.1. Introduction

6.2. Metabolic pathways of phytohormones and stress-induced protein expression  affecting their biosynthesis process

6.3. Proteins for intra-and inter-cellular transport of phytohormones

6.4. Hormone signaling systems, hormone cross talk and stress responses

6.5. The application of proteomics in the identification of hormone signaling pathways

6.6. Conclusion and prospective 

References

Chapter 7: Perturbation and disruption of plant hormone signaling by organic xenobiotic pollutions
Anne-Antonella Serra, Diana Alberto, Fanny Ramel, Gwenola Gouesbet, Cécile Sulmon, Ivan Couée

7.1. Introduction

7.2. Plant-hormone-interfering naturally-occurring organic compounds play important roles in the chemical ecology of plants

7.3. Transcriptome profiling reveals the wide-ranging molecular effects of plant-organic xenobiotic interactions

7.4. The wide-ranging molecular effects of plant-organic xenobiotic interactions emphasize the involvement of regulatory processes

7.5. Specifically-designed organic xenobiotics directly interact with plant hormone systems

7.6. Organic xenobiotics can cause biological effects that interfere with plant hormone dynamics and signalling

7.7. The diversity of organic xenobiotic occurrences in environmental pollutions can induce plant hormone perturbations in non-target plant communities

7.8.Conclusions and perspectives

References

Chapter 8: Plant hormone signaling mediates plant growth plasticity in response to metal stress
Xiangpei Kong, Huiyu Tian, Zhaojun Ding

8.1. Introduction

8.2. Cadmium (Cd)

8.3. Aluminum (Al)

8.4. Other metals

References

Part III: Transcriptional regulators of phytohormones

Chapter 9: Transcription factors and hormone-mediated mechanisms regulate stomata development and responses under abiotic stresses: an overview
Marco Landi, Alice Basile, Marco Fambrini, Claudio Pugliesi

9.1. Introduction

9.2. Stomata development

9.3. Stomatal response to drought/salinity and waterlogging/anoxia constraints

9.4. Conclusions and perspectives

References

Chapter 10: Convergence of stress-induced hormone signaling pathways on a transcriptional co-factor
Nidhi Dwivedi, Vinay Kumar and Jitendra K. Thakur

10.1. Introduction

10.2. Mediator complex

10.3. Role of Mediator in transcription

10.4. Flexibility of Mediator complex

10.5. Phytohormone signaling under stress

10.6. Effect of hormone and stress on the expression of Mediator subunit genes

10.7. Involvement of Mediator subunits in hormone signaling and stress response

10.8. Convergence of signaling pathways on Mediator complex

10.9. Conclusion

References

Chapter 11: Micro-Regulators of Hormones and Stress
Neha Sharma, Deepti Mittal and Neeti-Sanan Mishra

11.1. Introduction

11.2. Plant miRs

11.3. Role of miRs in hormone signaling

11.4. miR-mediated regulation of abiotic stress

11.5. Conclusions and Perspectives

References

Part IV: Involvement of multiple phytohormones in stress response

Chapter 12: Signal transduction components in guard cells during stomatal closure by plant hormones and microbial elicitors
Neha Sharma, Deepti Mittal and Neeti-Sanan Mishra

12.1. Introduction

12.2. Compounds that regulate stomatal function

12.3. Guard cell turgor and stomatal closure: Ion fluxes as the basis

12.4. Experimental approaches to study the signaling components

12.5. Sensing systems in guard cells

12.6. Signaling components in guard cells

12.7. Validation with Arabidopsis mutants

12.8. Concluding remarks

References

Chapter 13: Plant’s defense and survival strategies versus pathogen’s anti-defense and infection capability: The hormone-based mechanisms
Pranav Pankaj Sahu, Namisha Sharma and Manoj Prasad

13.1. Introduction

13.2. Modulation of hormone signaling network by pathogens for virulence

13.3. Alteration of hormone signaling network by plants for disease resistance

13.4. Conclusions and future perspectives

References

Chapter 14: Exploring crossroads between seed development and stress-response
Sushma Naithani, Hiro Nonogaki and Pankaj Jaiswal

14.1. Introduction

14.2. Genes, proteins, and pathways involved in seed development

14.3. Genes at Intersection of Seed Development and Stress-response

14.4. Exploring Bioinformatics resources

14.5. Insights and Future Prospects

14.6. Acknowledgement

14.7. Bibliography

Chapter 15: Role of Multiple Phytohormones in Regulating Stress Responses in Plants
Diwaker Tripathi, Dhirendra Kumar, Bal Krishna Chand Thakuri

15.1. Introduction

15.2. Biotic Stress

15.3. Role of Hormones in Abiotic Stress

15.4. Interaction of SA with other Stress Hormones

15.5. SA/ABA Antagonism

15.6. Future Perspective and Challenges

References

Chapter 16: Phytohormone and Drought stress: Plant Responses to Transcriptional Regulation
Neha Pandey, Zahra Iqbal, Bhoopendra K. Pande, Samir V. Sawant

16.1. Introduction

16.2. PHYTOHORMONES: Role in plant growth and development

16.3. Plant Hormonal response to stress condition

16.4. Hormonal mediated transcriptional response to stress condition

16.5. Phytohormones mediated signaling response under stress condition

16.6. Significance of Phytohormones in plant genetic engineering

16.7. Conclusion

References

Chapter 17: Mechanisms of hormone signaling in plants under abiotic and biotic stresses
Jogeswar Panigrahi  and Gyana Ranjan Rout

17.1. Introduction

17.2. Role of hormone in plant growth and development

17.3. Common tenets in hormone signaling in plants under abiotic and biotic stress

17.4. Role of ROS in hormone signaling pathways 

17.5. Role of MAPK in hormone signaling pathways

17.6. Role of Jasmonic acid and cytokinin on hormone signaling pathways

17.7. Role of Brassinosteroid on hormone signaling pathways

17.8. The cross talk of hormones and hormone like substances in plants under abiotic and biotic stress response

17.9. Conclusion

Reference

Chapter 18: Transgenic Approaches to Improve the Crop Productivity via Phytohormonal Research: A Focus on Mechanism of Phytohormone Action
Brijesh Gupta, Rohit Joshi, Ashwani Pareek, Sneh L. Singla-Pareek

18.1. Introduction

18.2. Phytohormones and crop yield: approaches and vision for genetic improvement

18.3.  Manipulation of phytohormone levels in transgenic plants

18.4. Phytohormonal crosstalks to enhance crop productivity

18.5. Conclusion and future directions

18.6. Acknowledgements

References

INDEX

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