Abstract

Multiple abiotic stresses like extreme temperatures, water shortage, flooding, salinity, and exposure to heavy metals are confronted by crop plants with changing climatic patterns. Prolonged exposure to these adverse environmental conditions leads to stunted plant growth and development with significant yield loss in crops. CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing tool is being frequently employed to understand abiotic stress-responsive genes. Noteworthy improvements in CRISPR-Cas technology have been made over the years, including upgradation of Cas proteins fidelity and efficiency, optimization of transformation protocols for different crop species, base and prime editing, multiplex gene-targeting, transgene-free editing, and graft-based heritable CRISPR-Cas9 approaches. These developments helped to improve the knowledge of abiotic stress tolerance in crops that could potentially be utilized to develop knock-out varieties and over-expressed lines to tackle the adverse effects of altered climatic patterns. This review summarizes the mechanistic understanding of heat, drought, salinity, and metal stress-responsive genes characterized so far using CRISPR-Cas9 and provides data on potential candidate genes that can be exploited by modern-day biotechnological tools to develop transgene-free genome-edited crops with better climate adaptability. Furthermore, the importance of early-maturing crop varieties to withstand abiotic stresses is also discussed in this review.

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