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      Physiological, Biochemical, and Molecular Mechanisms of Heat Stress Tolerance in Plants

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          Abstract

          High temperature (HT) stress is a major environmental stress that limits plant growth, metabolism, and productivity worldwide. Plant growth and development involve numerous biochemical reactions that are sensitive to temperature. Plant responses to HT vary with the degree and duration of HT and the plant type. HT is now a major concern for crop production and approaches for sustaining high yields of crop plants under HT stress are important agricultural goals. Plants possess a number of adaptive, avoidance, or acclimation mechanisms to cope with HT situations. In addition, major tolerance mechanisms that employ ion transporters, proteins, osmoprotectants, antioxidants, and other factors involved in signaling cascades and transcriptional control are activated to offset stress-induced biochemical and physiological alterations. Plant survival under HT stress depends on the ability to perceive the HT stimulus, generate and transmit the signal, and initiate appropriate physiological and biochemical changes. HT-induced gene expression and metabolite synthesis also substantially improve tolerance. The physiological and biochemical responses to heat stress are active research areas, and the molecular approaches are being adopted for developing HT tolerance in plants. This article reviews the recent findings on responses, adaptation, and tolerance to HT at the cellular, organellar, and whole plant levels and describes various approaches being taken to enhance thermotolerance in plants.

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          Most cited references209

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          Heat tolerance in plants: An overview

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            Role of plant heat-shock proteins and molecular chaperones in the abiotic stress response.

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              Gene networks involved in drought stress response and tolerance.

              Plants respond to survive under water-deficit conditions via a series of physiological, cellular, and molecular processes culminating in stress tolerance. Many drought-inducible genes with various functions have been identified by molecular and genomic analyses in Arabidopsis, rice, and other plants, including a number of transcription factors that regulate stress-inducible gene expression. The products of stress-inducible genes function both in the initial stress response and in establishing plant stress tolerance. In this short review, recent progress resulting from analysis of gene expression during the drought-stress response in plants as well as in elucidating the functions of genes implicated in the stress response and/or stress tolerance are summarized. A description is also provided of how various genes involved in stress tolerance were applied in genetic engineering of dehydration stress tolerance in transgenic Arabidopsis plants.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Int J Mol Sci
                Int J Mol Sci
                ijms
                International Journal of Molecular Sciences
                Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI)
                1422-0067
                May 2013
                03 May 2013
                : 14
                : 5
                : 9643-9684
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Agronomy, Faculty of Agriculture, Sher-e-Bangla Agricultural University, Dhaka 1207, Bangladesh
                [2 ]Laboratory of Plant Stress Responses, Department of Applied Biological Science, Faculty of Agriculture, Kagawa University, Miki-cho, Kita-gun, Kagawa 761-0795, Japan; E-Mails: knahar84@ 123456yahoo.com (K.N.); shamim1983@ 123456yahoo.com (M.M.A.)
                [3 ]Department of Agricultural Botany, Faculty of Agriculture, Sher-e-Bangla Agricultural University, Sher-e-Bangla Nagar, Dhaka 1207, Bangladesh
                [4 ]Department of Biotechnology, Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan 731235, West Bengal, India; E-Mail: mhzsauag@ 123456yahoo.com
                Author notes
                [* ]Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed; E-Mails: mhzsauag@ 123456yahoo.com (M.H.); fujita@ 123456ag.kagawa-u.ac.jp (M.F.); Tel.: +8187-891-3133 (M.F.); Fax: +8187-891-3021 (M.F.).
                Article
                ijms-14-09643
                10.3390/ijms14059643
                3676804
                23644891
                f899fad3-cfb1-4dae-9dfd-89940287ec88
                © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland

                This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).

                History
                : 01 February 2013
                : 16 April 2013
                : 19 April 2013
                Categories
                Review

                Molecular biology
                abiotic stress,antioxidant defense,climate change,high temperature,heat shock proteins,oxidative stress,plant omics,stress signaling

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