Abstract

Advances have been made in the development of drought-tolerant transgenic plants, including cereals. Rice, one of the most important cereals, is considered to be a critical target for improving drought tolerance, as present-day rice cultivation requires large quantities of water and as drought-tolerant rice plants should be able to grow in small amounts of water. Numerous transgenic rice plants showing enhanced drought tolerance have been developed to date. Such genetically engineered plants have generally been developed using genes encoding proteins that control drought regulatory networks. These proteins include transcription factors, protein kinases, receptor-like kinases, enzymes related to osmoprotectant or plant hormone synthesis, and other regulatory or functional proteins. Of the drought-tolerant transgenic rice plants described in this review, approximately one-third show decreased plant height under non-stressed conditions or in response to abscisic acid treatment. In cereal crops, plant height is a very important agronomic trait directly affecting yield, although the improvement of lodging resistance should also be taken into consideration. Understanding the regulatory mechanisms of plant growth reduction under drought stress conditions holds promise for developing transgenic plants that produce high yields under drought stress conditions. Plant growth rates are reduced more rapidly than photosynthetic activity under drought conditions, implying that plants actively reduce growth in response to drought stress. In this review, we summarize studies on molecular regulatory networks involved in response to drought stress. In a separate section, we highlight progress in the development of transgenic drought-tolerant rice plants, with special attention paid to field trial investigations.

Highlights

  • Evidence indicates that O. sativa NCED transcripts are up-regulated along with abscisic acid (ABA) accumulation under drought stress conditions (Maruyama et al, 2014), and that a core ABA-responsive cis-element (ABRE) sequence in the promoter regions of drought-inducible genes is enriched in rice, Arabidopsis and soybean (Maruyama et al, 2012)

  • These results suggest that the ABA-dependent signaling pathway in rice is activated by drought stress, similar to that of Arabidopsis and other plant species

  • Similar growth inhibition was observed in OsbZIP23 overexpressors. These results suggest that the ABA-dependent signaling pathway mediated by OsbZIP23 or OsbZIP46 is closely related to growth retardation mechanisms under drought stress conditions

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Evidence indicates that O. sativa NCED transcripts are up-regulated along with ABA accumulation under drought stress conditions (Maruyama et al, 2014), and that a core ABRE sequence in the promoter regions of drought-inducible genes is enriched in rice, Arabidopsis and soybean (Maruyama et al, 2012) These results suggest that the ABA-dependent signaling pathway in rice is activated by drought stress, similar to that of Arabidopsis and other plant species. Kim et al (2012b) identified a rice ABA signaling unit composed of OsPYL/RCAR5, OsPP2C30, SAPK2, and OREB1 for ABA-dependent gene regulation They have reported that OsPYL/RCAR5 functions as a positive regulator of abiotic stress-responsive gene expression and that transgenic rice plants overexpressing OsPYL/RCAR5 have improved drought tolerance. This relationship implies that growth of transgenic rice plants overexpressing OsbZIP23 or OsbZIP46CA1 is decreased under drought stress conditions, even though transgenic plants exhibit increased stress tolerance

Performance Growth trait
Done Done
Growth trait
Increases in spikelet fertility under drought
Decreases in shoot growth and seed
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