Understanding the roles of osmolytes for acclimatizing plants to changing environment: a review of potential mechanism

Plant Signal Behav. 2021 Aug 3;16(8):1913306. doi: 10.1080/15592324.2021.1913306. Epub 2021 Jun 16.

Abstract

Abiotic stresses are significant environmental issues that restrict plant growth, productivity, and survival while also posing a threat to global food production and security. Plants produce compatible solutes known as osmolytes to adapt themselves in such changing environment. Osmolytes contribute to homeostasis maintenance, provide the driving gradient for water uptake, maintain cell turgor by osmotic adjustment, and redox metabolism to remove excess level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reestablish the cellular redox balance as well as protect cellular machinery from osmotic stress and oxidative damage. Perceiving the mechanisms how plants interpret environmental signals and transmit them to cellular machinery to activate adaptive responses is important for crop improvement programs to get stress-tolerant varieties. A large number of studies conducted in the last few decades have shown that osmolytes accumulate in plants and have strong associations with abiotic stress tolerance. Production of abundant osmolytes is needed for tolerance in many plant species. In addition, transgenic plants overexpressing genes for different osmolytes showed enhanced tolerance to various abiotic stresses. Many important aspects of their mechanisms of action are yet to be largely identified, especially regarding the relevance and relative contribution of specific osmolytes to the stress tolerance of a given species. Therefore, more efforts and resources should be invested in the study of the abiotic stress responses of plants in their natural habitats. The present review focuses on the possible roles and mechanisms of osmolytes and their association toward abiotic stress tolerance in plants. This review would help the readers in learning more about osmolytes and how they behave in changing environments as well as getting an idea of how this knowledge could be applied to develop stress tolerance in plants.

Keywords: Osmoprotectants; abiotic stress; amino acid; carbohydrate; drought; polyamine; polyol; salinity.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Acclimatization*
  • Amino Acids / biosynthesis*
  • Carbohydrates / biosynthesis*
  • Crops, Agricultural / metabolism
  • Crops, Agricultural / physiology
  • Cytoprotection
  • Droughts
  • Osmoregulation
  • Osmosis
  • Osmotic Pressure*
  • Oxidation-Reduction
  • Oxidative Stress
  • Plant Development
  • Plants / metabolism*
  • Plants, Genetically Modified / metabolism
  • Plants, Genetically Modified / physiology
  • Polyamines / metabolism*
  • Salinity
  • Stress, Physiological*
  • Sugar Alcohols / metabolism
  • Sugars / metabolism
  • Water

Substances

  • Amino Acids
  • Carbohydrates
  • Polyamines
  • Sugar Alcohols
  • Sugars
  • Water

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology, Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh.