Research progress on plant stress-associated protein (SAP) family: Master regulators to deal with environmental stresses.
Rania Ben SaadWalid Ben RomdhaneNatália ČmikováNarjes BaazaouiMohamed Taieb BouteraaBouthaina Ben AkachaYosra ChouaibiMaria MaistoAnis Ben HsounaStefania GarzoliAlina WiszniewskaMiroslava KačániováPublished in: BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology (2024)
Every year, unfavorable environmental factors significantly affect crop productivity and threaten food security. Plants are sessile; they cannot move to escape unfavorable environmental conditions, and therefore, they activate a variety of defense pathways. Among them are processes regulated by stress-associated proteins (SAPs). SAPs have a specific zinc finger domain (A20) at the N-terminus and either AN1 or C2H2 at the C-terminus. SAP proteins are involved in many biological processes and in response to various abiotic or biotic constraints. Most SAPs play a role in conferring transgenic stress resistance and are stress-inducible. The emerging field of SAPs in abiotic or biotic stress response regulation has attracted the attention of researchers. Although SAPs interact with various proteins to perform their functions, the exact mechanisms of these interactions remain incompletely understood. This review aims to provide a comprehensive understanding of SAPs, covering their diversity, structure, expression, and subcellular localization. SAPs play a pivotal role in enabling crosstalk between abiotic and biotic stress signaling pathways, making them essential for developing stress-tolerant crops without yield penalties. Collectively, understanding the complex regulation of SAPs in stress responses can contribute to enhancing tolerance against various environmental stresses through several techniques such as transgenesis, classical breeding, or gene editing.