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Heat Stress in Legume Seed Setting: Effects, Causes, and Future Prospects

Authors

Liu, Yonghua
Li, Jiajia
Zhu, Yulei
Jones, Ashley
Rose, Ray J.
Song, Youhong

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Frontiers Research Foundation

Abstract

Grain legumes provide a rich resource of plant nutrition to human diets and are vital for food security and sustainable cropping. Heat stress during flowering has a detrimental effect on legume seed yield, mainly due to irreversible loss of seed number. To start with, we provide an overview of the developmental and physiological basis of controlling seed setting in response to heat stress. It is shown that every single process of seed setting including male and female gametophyte development, fertilization, and early seed/fruit development is sensitive to heat stress, in particular male reproductive development in legume crops is especially susceptible. A series of physiochemical processes including heat shock proteins, antioxidants, metabolites, and hormones centered with sugar starvation are proposed to play a key role in regulating legume seed setting in response to heat stress. The exploration of the molecular mechanisms underlying reproductive heat tolerance is in its infancy. Medicago truncatula, with a small diploid genome, and well-established transformation system and molecular platforms, has become a valuable model for testing gene function that can be applied to advance the physiological and molecular understanding of legume reproductive heat tolerance.

Description

Citation

Source

Frontiers in Plant Science

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY)

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