Surviving a Dry Future: Abscisic Acid (ABA)-Mediated Plant Mechanisms for Conserving Water under Low Humidity.
Frances C SussmilchScott A M McAdamPublished in: Plants (Basel, Switzerland) (2017)
Angiosperms are able to respond rapidly to the first sign of dry conditions, a decrease in air humidity, more accurately described as an increase in the vapor pressure deficit between the leaf and the atmosphere (VPD), by abscisic acid (ABA)-mediated stomatal closure. The genes underlying this response offer valuable candidates for targeted selection of crop varieties with improved drought tolerance, a critical goal for current plant breeding programs, to maximize crop production in drier and increasingly marginalized environments, and meet the demands of a growing population in the face of a changing climate. Here, we review current understanding of the genetic mechanisms underpinning ABA-mediated stomatal closure, a key means for conserving water under dry conditions, examine how these mechanisms evolved, and discuss what remains to be investigated.
Keyphrases
- climate change
- arabidopsis thaliana
- transcription factor
- genome wide
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- squamous cell carcinoma
- radiation therapy
- cancer therapy
- lymph node
- current status
- drug delivery
- copy number
- atomic force microscopy
- early breast cancer
- heat stress
- locally advanced
- bioinformatics analysis
- genome wide analysis