info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
Abiotic Stress in Plants and Metabolic Responses
Fecha
2013-03-13Registro en:
978-953-51-1024-8
Autor
Fraire Velázquez, Saúl
Balderas Hernández, Victor Emmanuel
Institución
Resumen
The vast metabolic diversity observed in plants is the direct result of continuous evolutionary
processes. There are more than 200,000 known plant secondary metabolites, representing a
vast reservoir of diverse functions. When the environment is adverse and plant growth is
affected, metabolism is profoundly involved in signaling, physiological regulation, and
defense responses. At the same time, in feedback, abiotic stresses affect the biosynthesis,
concentration, transport, and storage of primary and secondary metabolites. Metabolic
adjustments in response to abiotic stressors involve fine adjustments in amino acid, carbohydrate,
and amine metabolic pathways. Proper activation of early metabolic responses helps
cells restore chemical and energetic imbalances imposed by the stress and is crucial to
acclimation and survival. Time-series experiments have revealed that metabolic activities
respond to stress more quickly than transcriptional activities do. In order to study and map
all the simultaneous metabolic responses and, more importantly, to link these responses to a
specific abiotic stress, integrative and comprehensive analyses are required. Metabolomics is
the systematic approach through which qualitative and quantitative analysis of a large number
of metabolites is increasing our knowledge of how complex metabolic networks interact and
how they are dynamically modified under stress adaptation and tolerance processes. A vast
amount of research has been done using metabolomic approaches to (i) characterize metabolic
responses to abiotic stress, (ii) to discover novel genes and annotate gene function, and, (iii)
more recently, to identify metabolic quantitative trait loci. The integration of the collected
metabolic data concerning abiotic stress responses is helping in the identification of tolerance
traits that may be transferable to cultivated crop species. In this review, the diverse metabolic
responses identified in plants so far are discussed. We also include recent advances in the study
of plant metabolomes and metabolic fluxes with a focus on abiotic stress-tolerance trait
interactions.