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ARTICLE IN PRESS Journal of Plant Physiology 161 (2004) 1189–1202 www.elsevier.de/jplph REVIEW Drought-induced responses of photosynthesis and antioxidant metabolism in higher plants Attipalli Ramachandra Reddya,*, Kolluru Viswanatha Chaitanyaa, Munusamy Vivekanandanb a School of Life Sciences, Pondicherry University, Pondicherry 605 014, India Department of Biotechnology, School of Life Sciences, Bharatidasan University, Tiruchirapalli 620 024, India b Received 16 October 2003; accepted 7 January 2004 KEYWORDS Abscisic acid; Antioxidants; Antioxidative enzymes; Drought; Higher plants; Photosynthesis Summary Environmental stresses trigger a wide variety of plant responses, ranging from altered gene expression and cellular metabolism to changes in growth rates and crop yields. A plethora of plant reactions exist to circumvent the potentially harmful effects caused by a wide range of both abiotic and biotic stresses, including light, drought, salinity, high temperatures, and pathogen infections. Among the environmental stresses, drought stress is one of the most adverse factors of plant growth and productivity. Understanding the biochemical and molecular responses to drought is essential for a holistic perception of plant resistance mechanisms to water-limited conditions. Drought stress progressively decreases CO2 assimilation rates due to reduced stomatal conductance. Drought stress also induces reduction in the contents and activities of photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle enzymes, including the key enzyme, ribulose1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase. The critical roles of proline and glycinebetaine, as well as the role of abscisic acid (ABA), under drought stress conditions have been actively researched to understand the tolerance of plants to dehydration. In addition, drought stress-induced generation of active oxygen species is well recognized at the cellular level and is tightly controlled at both the production and consumption levels in vivo, through increased antioxidative systems. Knowledge of sensing and signaling pathways, including ABA-mediated changes in response to drought stress, is essential to improve crop management. This review focuses on the ability and strategies of higher plants to respond and adapt to drought stress. & 2004 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved. Abbreviations: A, foliar photosynthetic rate; AA, ascorbic acid; ABA, abscisic acid; APX, ascorbate peroxidase; CAT, catalase; COD, choline oxidase; CMO, choline monoxygenase; CDH, choline dehydrogenase; DHA, dehydroascorbate; FBPase, fructose-1,6bisphosphatase; GlyBet, glycine betaine; GR, glutathione reductase; LEA, late embryogenesis abundant; MDA, monodehydroascorbate; MDAR, monodehydroascorbate reductase; POD, peroxidase; ROS, reactive oxygen species; RWC, relative water content; RuBP, ribulose1,5-bisphosphate; SPS, sucrose phosphate synthase; SOD, superoxide dismutase *Corresponding author. Tel.: þ91-0413-2655991; fax: þ91-0413-2655211. E-mail address: [email protected] (A.R. Reddy). 0176-1617/$ - see front matter & 2004 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.jplph.2004.01.013 ARTICLE IN PRESS 1190 Introduction Plants are subjected to several harsh environmental stresses that adversely affect growth, metabolism, and yield. Drought, salinity, low and high temperatures, flood, pollutants, and radiation are the important stress factors limiting the productivity of crops (Lawlor, 2002). Several biotic (insects, bacteria, fungi, and viruses) and abiotic (light, temperature, water availability, nutrients, and soil structure) factors affect the growth in higher plants (as reviewed by Lichtenthaler, 1996, 1998). Among these, drought is a major abiotic factor that limits agricultural crop production. Plants experience drought stress either when the water supply to roots becomes difficult or when the transpiration rate becomes very high. These two conditions often coincide under arid and semi-arid climates. Water stress tolerance is seen in almost all plant species but its extent varies from species to species. Although the general effects of drought on plant growth are fairly well known, the primary effects of water deficit at the biochemical and the molecular levels are not well understood (Zhu, 2002; Chaitanya et al., 2003; Chaves et al., 2003). In order to improve the agricultural productivity within the limited land resources, it is imperative to ensure higher crop yields against unfavorable environmental stresses. Understanding plant responses to the external environment is of greater importance and also a fundamental part for making the crops stress tolerant. In this article we provide an overview of the current understanding of photosynthetic carbon metabolism under drought. In addition, we will describe the cellular antioxidative defense strategies used to circumvent the deleterious effects of drought in the leaves of higher plants. Photosynthesis under drought The foliar photosynthetic rate, A, of higher plants is known to decrease as the relative water content (RWC) and leaf water potential decrease (Lawlor and Cornic, 2002). However, the debate continues as to whether drought mainly limits photosynthesis through stomatal closure or through metabolic impairment (Tezara et al., 1999; Lawson et al., 2003). Stomatal limitation was generally accepted to be the main determinant of reduced photosynthesis under drought stress (Cornic, 2000). This has been attributed to decreases in both A and internal CO2 concentration, which finally inhibits total photosynthetic metabolism. Several nonstomatal effects are also attributed for stomatal A.R. Reddy et al. closure during drought. These include photophosphorylation (Meyer and Genty, 1999), ribulose-1,5bisphosphate (RuBP) regeneration (Lawlor, 2002), rubisco activity (Medrano et al., 1997) and ATP synthesis (Tezara et al., 1999). Considering the past literature as well as the current information on drought-induced photosynthetic responses, it is evident that stomata close progressively with increased drought stress, followed by reduced net photosynthetic rates. It is well known that leaf water status always interacts with stomatal conductance and a good correlation between leaf water potential and stomatal conductance always exists, even under drought stress. It is now clear that there is a drought-induced root-to-leaf signaling, which is promoted by soil drying through the transpiration stream, resulting in stomatal closure. This chemical signal is now known to be abscisic acid (ABA) and a direct correlation between the xylem ABA content and stomatal conductance has been demonstrated (Socias et al., 1997). The closure of stomata under drought has also been implicated due to changes in plant nutritional status, xylem sap pH, farnesyl tranferase activity, xylem hydrolic conductivity, and leaf-to-air vapor pressure deficit (Oren et al., 1999). However, differences in the complex regulation of stomatal conductance among several species and genotypes in response to leaf water potential and ABA makes it difficult to see a clear pattern in photosynthetic responses to drought. Decrease in RWC has been known to induce stomatal closure and thus a parallel decrease A (Cornic, 2000). Nevertheless, it has been emphasized that a high degree of coregulation exists between stomatal opening and photosynthesis (Farquhar et al., 2001; Hubbard et al., 2001). Thus, stomatal movements are very dynamic, involving complex regulation by several environmental factors, and stomatal conductance should be taken as an integrative parameter to assess photosynthetic responses under drought. The limitation of photosynthesis under drought through metabolic impairment is a more complex phenomenon than stomatal limitation. Changes in the cellular carbon metabolism are likely to occur early in the dehydration processes. Drought generally reduces the biochemical capacity for carbon assimilation and utilization. The rate of photosynthesis in higher plants depends on the activity of ribulose-1, 5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) as well as synthesis of RuBP (Ramachandra Reddy, 1996; Tezara et al., 1999; Chaitanya et al., 2002a; Parry et al., 2002). Despite several studies on photosynthetic carbon assimilation under drought, a definitive conclusion regarding the most sensitive changes in rubisco metabolism remains ARTICLE IN PRESS Photosynthetic and antioxidant responses under drought stress elusive. Rubisco quantity limits photosynthesis in most cases, although in some cases the regeneration of RuBP has been shown to limit the photosynthetic capacity (Vu et al., 1999). Studies on transgenic plants suggest that rubisco may not be the main limitation in chloroplast metabolism (Tezara et al., 1999). However, most of the evidence on drought-induced changes indicates that the amount and activity of rubisco really control photosynthetic carbon assimilation. The quantity of rubisco in leaves is controlled by the rate of synthesis and degradation of the enzyme, even in stressful environments. Decreased synthesis of rubisco under drought was evidenced by a rapid decrease in the abundance of rubisco small subunit (rbcS) in tomato (Vu et al., 1999). Parry et al. (2002) suggested that rubisco activity is regulated to match the capacity of the leaf to regenerate RuBP. Loss of rubisco activity has been reported in several plants under drought (Parry et al., 2002; Chaitanya et al., 2003). In tobacco, initial and total activities of rubisco were decreased under drought and this decrease was due to the reduction in the apparent Kcat ; rather than the changes in the activation state of the enzyme (Parry et al., 2002). These studies indicate that irreversible damage to rubisco should be taking place in the leaves, or there is a reduction in the total soluble protein. Inhibition of rubisco activity was due to binding of inhibitors like CA1P with rubisco. Total activity of rubisco has been used as an indicator to estimate the percentage of catalytic sites that are blocked by inhibitors. The decrease in the initial and total activities of rubisco with an increase in drought stress was related to an increase in CA1P (Parry et al., 2002). However, the interactions of rubisco with tight binding inhibitors have been known to be advantageous in vivo, as they could prevent rubisco from degradation by proteases. It is thus believed that although drought stress reduces rubisco activity, the carboxylating enzyme is otherwise protected from protease degradation. It is quite interesting to know that the release of tight binding receptors requires the participation of rubisco activase and ATP hydrolysis. Rubisco activase is an abundant protein, which regulates the active site conformation of rubisco, removes the tight-bound inhibitors, and then allows rubisco to undergo rapid carboxylation. This suggests that there is now evidence that rubisco activase activity also decreases with increasing drought stress (Chaves et al., 2002). Under these conditions, the removal of inhibitors from rubisco binding sites by rubisco activase is now known to be impaired due to reduced ATP concentrations under drought stress conditions (Tezara et al., 1999). 1191 The rate of photosynthesis also depends on the synthesis of RuBP. The response of photosynthesis to RuBP content was linear, indicating that the supply of RuBP determines the net photosynthetic activity. However, limited data are available on the actual role of RuBP regeneration in relation to the rubisco activity. Tezara et al. (1999) reported that limitations in RuBP regeneration could result from an inadequate supply of ATP and/or NADPH to the PCR cycle, or from a decreased rate of turn over caused by low enzyme activity either in stressed or non-stressed plants. The reactions of RuBP to 3-PGA always decreased with reducing RWC, which suggest that regeneration of RuBP was inhibited under drought. RuBP contents and synthesis are presumed to be under the control of the PCR cycle or the supply of ATP and NADPH to the PCR cycle. ATP synthesis was known to limit A at low RWC because of the inhibition of photophosphorylation in waterstressed sunflower leaves (Lawlor, 2002). Under conditions of drought, reduction in chloroplast volume might also lead to desiccation within the chloroplast, which in turn leads to conformational changes in rubisco. Drought stress conditions are also known to acidify the chloroplast stroma, resulting in inhibited rubisco activity (Meyer and Genty, 1999). However, C4 plants are known to use water more efficiently than C3 plants, but they also need rubisco to achieve a given rate of photosynthesis. The primary carboxylating enzyme in C4 plants, phosphoenol pyruvate carboxylase (PEPcase), is also inhibited under drought (Boyer et al., 1997). It is also known that the limitation of PCR cycles per se under drought stress conditions is due to partial reduction in the activities of the other enzymes involved in the cycle. The activities of phosphoribulo kinase and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) were also reduced with decreases in RWC (Haupt-Herting and Fock, 2002). Drought also results in changes in the ratio of the end products of photosynthesis, starch, and sucrose. With reduced water potentials, the activities of FBPase and sucrose phosphate synthase (SPS) declined, indicating that the rate of sucrose synthesis is strongly influenced by drought stress (Haupt-Herting and Fock, 2002). The inhibited activities of FBPase and SPS might regulate the synthesis of sucrose and starch and as well as their partitioning under drought stress. The altered starch/sucrose ratios under drought stress should certainly cause changes in the Pi flux across the chloroplast membrane. Reduced levels of Pi in the chloroplasts inhibit ATP synthesis, which in turn has a greater impact on photophosphorylation and PCR cycle (Tezara et al., 1999). Sometimes the combined ARTICLE IN PRESS 1192 effects of heat and light stress on photosynthesis superimposed with drought will be more complex (Wingler et al., 1999). Under these unfavorable conditions, plants are known to lose chlorophyll (Havaux and Tardy, 1999) or divert the absorbed light to other processes, like thermal dissipation to protect the photosynthetic apparatus (DemingAdams and Adams, 1996). Photochemical efficiency under drought can also be monitored by measuring chlorophyll fluorescence to assess the photosynthetic functioning (Osmond et al., 1999), while multispectral fluorescence images are also currently being used to study plant responses to drought stress (Lichtenthaler, 1997). Drought-induced oxidative stress in plants Acclimation of plants to changing environmental conditions such as drought stress is essential for survival and growth. Plant responses to drought stress, especially in reference to chloroplast metabolism, are complex. Drought stress is known to inhibit photosynthetic activity in tissues due to an imbalance between light capture and its utilization (Foyer and Noctor, 2000). Down regulation of photosystem II (PSII) activity results in an imbalance between the generation and utilization of electrons, apparently resulting in changes in quantum yield. These changes in the photochemistry of chloroplasts in the leaves of droughtstressed plants result in the dissipation of excess light energy in the PSII core and antenna, thus 1 generating active oxygen species (O 2 , O2, H2O2, OH), which are potentially dangerous under drought stress conditions (Peltzer et al., 2002). Also, changes in the photosynthetic electron transport under drought inevitably lead to the formation of superoxide radicals (O 2 ), since the molecular oxygen competes with NADP for reduction at the acceptor side of photosystem I (PSI). Although photosynthetic electron transport is considerably tolerant to drought stress, variations of 20–30% (reduction in the leaf chloroplast photosynthetic electron transport) among plant species are not uncommon. Drought not only causes dramatic loss of pigments, but also leads to disorganization of thylakoid membranes (Ladjal et al., 2000). Photochemical reactions associated with PSII have been shown to be more susceptible to drought. Loss or decline in D1 and D2 proteins of PSII have been reported, which were associated with the loss of PSII chemistry (Lu and Zhang, 1999). Inhibition of CO2 assimilation, coupled with the changes in A.R. Reddy et al. photosystem activities and photosynthetic electron transport capacity, results in accelerated production of active oxygen via the chloroplast Mehler reaction (Asada, 1999). Thus, during drought, there is considerable potential for increased accumulation of superoxide and hydrogen peroxide resulting from the increased rate of O2 photoreduction in chloroplasts (Robinson and Bunce, 2000). PSII down-regulation and thermodynamic constraints exert a restraining control on the rate of electron flow in the drought-stressed leaves, and the oxygen free radicals are responsible for most of the oxidative damage in biological systems. Deleterious effects of free radicals on biological structures include DNA nicking, amino acid and protein oxidation, and lipid peroxidation (Asada, 1999; Johnson et al., 2003). Reactive oxygen species (ROS) attack the most sensitive biological macromolecules in cells to impair their function. The damaged targets are recovered by repair or by replacement via de novo biosynthesis. However, under intense stressful conditions and due to severely damaged target molecules, a catastrophic cascade of events set in, resulting in cell death. The destiny of cells under stressful environments is determined by the duration of stress as well as the protective capacity of the plant. ROS plays a crucial role in causing cellular damage under drought stress. The sequence of events in the plant tissue subjected to drought stress are: (1) increased production of ROS and of oxidized target molecules; (2) increases in the expression of genes for antioxidant functions; (3) increases in the levels of antioxidative systems and antioxidants; and (4) increased scavenging capacity for ROS, resulting in tolerance against the drought stress (Mano, 2002). Secondary products of ROS in plant cells during stress include lipid peroxides and thiol radicals. Although a series of regulatory mechanisms have evolved within the plant cell to limit the production of these toxic molecules, oxidative damage remains a potential problem, since it causes perturbations in metabolism, such as a loss of coordination between energy production (source) and energy utilization (sink) processes during photosynthesis in green leaves in stressful environments. Mechanisms of ROS detoxification exist in all plants and can be categorized as enzymatic [superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), ascorbate peroxidase (APX), peroxidase (POD), glutathione reductase (GR) and monodehydroascorbate reductase (MDAR)] and non-enzymatic (flavanones, anthocyanins, carotenoids and ascorbic acid (AA)). The degree to which the activities of antioxidant enzymes and the amount of antioxidants increase under drought stress will be extremely variable ARTICLE IN PRESS Photosynthetic and antioxidant responses under drought stress among several plant species and even between two cultivars of the same species. The level of response depends on the species, the development, and the metabolic state of the plant, as well as the duration and intensity of the stress. Many stress situations cause an increase in the total foliar antioxidant activity (Pastori et al., 2000), but little is known about the coordinative control of activity and expression of the different antioxidant enzymes in plant cells that are subjected to drought stress. Several studies have reported enhanced stress tolerance related to overproduction of chloroplastic SOD (Arisi et al., 1998; Foyer, 2002). Induction of oxidative stress in drought-stressed plants has also been well known (Ramachandra Reddy et al., 2000; Chaitanya et al., 2002b; Mano, 2002). Antioxidant components are also known to be distributed among all photosynthetic cells in higher plants. The distribution of antioxidative enzymes between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells of C4 plants has been described (Foyer, 2002). In maize leaves, GR and DHAR were exclusively localized in mesophyll cells whereas most of the SOD and APX were localized in mesophyll and bundle sheath cells. CAT and MDHAR were approximately equally distributed between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells. H2O2 was found to accumulate only in mesophyll cells (Doulis et al., 1997; Foyer, 2001). These localization studies are very interesting, because enzymes of the PCR cycle, which are very sensitive to H2O2, are found only in bundle sheath chloroplasts. Such studies on C4 plants indicate that oxidative damage was not uniformly distributed between mesophyll and bundle sheath cells of C4 plants. Kingston-Smith and Foyer (2000) suggested that oxidative damage under stressful conditions in C4 plants is restricted to bundle sheath tissue because of inadequate antioxidant protection in this tissue. However, very little mechanistic information is available on drought-induced antioxidative metabolism between the two cell types in C4 plants. In contrast, few experiments on woody plants have shown differing antioxidant system responses to drought stress, ranging from no effects to decreases in the activity in certain antioxidative enzymes (Kronfub et al., 1998). The reason for this contrasting behavior among plant species might be due to the plants’ gradual adjustment to the changing climate, thus allowing for an acclimation process. Plant responses to drought stress The responses of plants to drought stress are highly complex, involving deleterious and/or adaptive 1193 changes. In particular, if the drought stress is under field conditions, the plant responses can be modified synergistically or antagonistically. Early responses of plants to drought stress usually help the plant to survive for some time, while the acclimation of the plant subjected to drought is indicated by the accumulation of certain new metabolites associated with the structural capabilities to improve plant functioning under drought stress (Pinhero et al., 2001). Acclimation-related changes in the root/shoot ratio or the temporary changes in accumulation of reserves in the stem under drought stress are accompanied by the changes in carbon and nitrogen metabolism (Noctor et al., 2002). A continuous oxidative assault on plants during drought stress has led to the presence of an arsenal enzymatic (discussed above) and nonenzymatic antioxidant defenses to counter the phenomenon of oxidative stress in plants. The non-enzymatic plant antioxidants can be classified into two major types: (1) AA-like scavengers, and (2) pigments such as carotenoids (Conklin, 2001). AA is an important antioxidant, which reacts not only with H2O2 but also with O 2 , OH and lipid hydroperoxidases. Protective functions of AA are also assayed in a wide variety of common human ailments and diseases. In recent years, clear evidence has emerged that elevated dietary intake of AA lowers the incidence of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and other oxidative stress disorders (Noctor and Foyer, 1998; Grassmann et al., 2002; Munne-Bosch and Algere, 2003). On the other hand, AA has been implicated in several types of biological activities in plants: (1) as an enzyme co-factor, (2) as an antioxidant, and (3) as a donor/ acceptor in electron transport at the plasma membrane or in the chloroplasts, all of which are related to oxidative stress resistance (Conklin, 2001). In chloroplasts, the so-called ‘‘HalliwellAsada’’ pathway indicates that APX uses AA and oxidizes it to monodehydroascorbate (MDA). MDA may give rise to dehydroascorbate (DHA). Both MDA and DHA will then be reduced to regenerate the ascorbate pool. This type of scavenging is thought to occur near PSI, thereby minimizing the risk of escape and reaction of ROS with each other (Foyer and Noctor, 2000). AA is water-soluble and also has an additional role in protecting or regenerating oxidized carotenoids or tocopherols (Imai et al., 1999). AA is a major metabolite in chloroplasts of higher plants and represents about 10% of the soluble carbohydrate pool in leaves (Noctor and Foyer, 1998). AA is also known to function as the ‘‘terminal antioxidant’’ because the redox potential of AA/MDA pair (þ280 mv) is lower than that of most of the bioradicals (Scandalios et al., 1997). ARTICLE IN PRESS 1194 The levels of glutahione reductase and DHA reductase increased upon water stress in Sporobolus stapfianus (Conklin, 2001). An increase in MVdependent photoproduction of MDHA was also observed in lettuce leaves due to water stress (Conklin, 2001). However, very little is known about the regulation of AA biosynthesis in higher plants. Nevertheless, AA concentrations are reported to increase in response to wounding (Robinson and Bunce, 2000). It is conceivable that adaptations of intracellular AA to drought stress might clearly depend on the balance between the rates and capacity of AA biosynthesis and turnover related to antioxidant demand (Chaves et al., 2002). The biosynthesis of AA from hexose phosphate and its involvement in protection against photooxidative stress suggest that there may be links between photosynthesis and the AA pool size. Although the antioxidant defense system is impaired under stressful conditions, plants are able to get rid of excessive energy by thermal dissipation associated with an increase in the concentration of xanthophyll pigments, zeaxanthin, and antheraxanthin, at the expense of violoxanthin in water stressed plants (Alonso et al., 2001). The high proportion of xanthophylls under stress conditions may serve as a protection mechanism in leaves. The activation of the xanthophyll cycle has also been detected in several other plants subjected to drought stress (Foyer, 2001). Mechanisms are not known of a precise regulation to prevent potentially destructive side reactions involving AOS that damage photosynthetic pigments and proteins. In addition, the xanthophyll cycle may be involved in lowering the yield of triplet chlorophyll formation by pre-emptive quenching of the excited singlet state of chlorophyll (Rontein et al., 2002). It is thus presumed that the role of antioxidants and carotenoid pigments in regulating photosynthetic electron transport is crucial. Thus, a complex relationship between xanthophyll cycle-dependent energy quenching and formation of AOS exists in photosynthetic systems of plants under drought stress. a-tocopherol, found in green parts of plants also scavenges lipid peroxy radicals through the concerted action of other antioxidants (MunneBosch and Alegre, 2002). Further, tocopherols were also known to protect lipids and other membrane components by physically quenching and chemically reacting with 1O2 in chloroplasts, thus protecting the structure and function of PSII (Trebst et al., 2002). Many plants and other organisms cope with osmotic stress by synthesizing and accumulating some compatible solutes, which are termed as osmoprotectants or osmolytes. These compounds A.R. Reddy et al. are small, electrically neutral molecules, which are non-toxic even at molar concentrations (Alonso et al., 2001). During osmotic stress, plant cells accumulate solutes to prevent water loss and to reestablish cell turgor. The solutes that accumulate during the osmotic adjustment include ions such as Kþ, Naþ, and Cl or organic solutes that include nitrogen-containing compounds, such as proline and other amino acids, polyamines and quaternary ammonium compounds like glycine betaine (GlyBet) (Tamura et al., 2003). Other osmolytes, that are produced in response to stress, include sucrose, polyols, sugar alchohols (pinitol), and oligosacharides. The organic solutes are compatible with cellular processes and accumulate to high levels in the cytosol with increasing drought. Production of osmolytes is a general way to stabilize membranes and maintain protein conformation at low leaf water potentials. The synthesis and accumulation of osmolytes varies among plant species as well as among different cultivars of the same species. Osmolytes play a major role in osmotic adjustment and also protect the cells by scavenging ROS (Pinhero et al., 2001). Proline is also known to be involved in reducing the photodamage in the thylakoid membranes by scavenging and/or reducing the production of 1O2. Proline accumulation in plants is caused, not only by the activation of proline biosynthesis, but also by the inactivation of proline degradation, thereby resulting in a decrease in the level of accumulated proline in rehydrated plants. Proline degradation to glutamic acid via D1 pyrroline-5-carboxylate in higher plants is catalyzed by proline dehydrogenase and D1 pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase in mitochondria (Bohnert and Jenson, 1996). It can also be inferred that proline acts as a free radical scavenger and may be more important in overcoming stress than in acting as a simple osmolyte. Such studies open a new avenue of research for metabolic engineering in several agriculturally important crop plants for drought resistance. Accumulation of other amino acids like glycine, serine, and glutamate are known to regulate and integrate the metabolism in stressed photosynthetic tissues (Lawlor and Cornic, 2002). Proline concentrations increase many fold with reduced leaf water potentials, and at this stage photosynthesis is known to be quite reduced (Morot-Guadry et al., 2001). A more common explanation for the accumulation of proline is that it confers advantages by protecting membranes and proteins when RWC decreases. In plant cells, osmolytes are typically confined to the chloroplasts and cytoplasmic compartments that together occupy 20% or less of the volume of mature cells (Ain-Lhout et al., ARTICLE IN PRESS Photosynthetic and antioxidant responses under drought stress 2001). Natural osmolyte concentrations in plant cells can reach 200 mM or more, and such concentrations are osmotically significant and have pivotal roles in maintaining cell turgor and driving the gradient for water uptake under stress (Rhodes and Samaras, 1994). H3C H3C N CH2 H2C CH2 H2C C - COO H3C Glycine Betaine COON H2 L-proline Accumulation of GlyBet occurs in some, but not in all, higher plants. Most of the GlyBet is synthesized in chloroplasts as two enzymes, namely choline monoxygenase (CMO) and betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase, are responsible for GlyBet synthesis chloroplastically. GlyBet synthesis can be induced by both drought and salt stress (NaCl, KCl, MgCl2, Na2SO4) by over-expression of CMO, and betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase (Nakamura et al., 2001). Progressive drought and salinity were also known to induce late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins in vegetative organs, which can stabilize enzyme complexes and the structure of cell membranes (Chourey et al., 2003; Liang et al., 2003). The increased concentrations of GlyBet under drought stress situations clearly suggest that this osmolyte has an important role in protecting plant cell mechanisms under conditions of drought. A physiological role of GlyBet in alleviating osmotic stress was proposed based on accumulation of GlyBet in plants subjected to drought (Jun et al., 2000). GlyBet has been shown to protect enzymes and membranes and also to stabilize PSII protein pigment complexes under stressful conditions (Papageorgiou and Morata, 1995). A moderate stress tolerance, as shown by dry weight production in transgenic plants, was noticed based on relative shoot growth studies under stress conditions, like drought (Jun et al., 2000). Abscisic acid (ABA) responsiveness to water deficit in plants The plant hormone ABA is produced de novo under water deficit conditions and plays a major role in response and tolerance to dehydration (Shinozaki 1195 and Yamaguchi-Shinozaki, 1999). ABA is synthesized from xanthophylls via violaxanthin, xanthoxin and ABA-aldehyde (C-40 pathway). The conversion of violaxanthin to xanthoxin is the rate-limiting step in ABA biosynthesis under drought stress. The involvement of drought-induced ABA and ethylene in shoot and root growth is still a controversial subject (Robert and LeNoble, 2002). Under drought-stressed conditions, stomata close in response to either a decline in leaf turgor and/or water potential, indicating that stomatal responses are closely linked to soil moisture content and leaf water status. Much is known about the role of ABA in closing the stomata as well as ABA production in dehydrating roots and ABA circulation in the plant (Wilkinson and Davies, 2002). However, little is understood about the exact relationship between water deficit and ABA long-distance signaling and the nature of interactions between ABA and other chemical signals, like ethylene and cytokinins (Sauter and Hartung, 2000). ABA-induced stomatal closure causes depression in net CO2 uptake, which involves mechanisms at both the stomatal and chloroplast levels. The mid-day decline in stomatal conductance in several plant species under drought conditions may be due to increased sensitivity to xylem-carried ABA, which is induced by low leaf water potentials (Wilkinson and Davies, 2002). Also, the decline in intercellular CO2 following stomatal closure apparently induces a down regulation of photosynthetic machinery to match the available carbon substrate. The amount of ABA in xylem sap can increase substantially as a function of reduced water availability in the soil and this might result in an increased ABA concentration in different compartments of the leaf. Zhang and Outlaw (2001) reported that stressing Vicia faba roots could change ABA concentrations at the guard cell apoplast and that the apoplastic guard cell ABA concentration correlated with changes in stomatal aperture more effectively than did the guard cell symplastic fraction. These studies indicate that apoplastically facing guard cell ABA receptors seem to be important in the responses to stress signals experienced by plants. Increases in the xylem sap ABA and leaf ABA were correlated with reduced stomatal conductance under partial root drying conditions in grape vines (Stoll et al., 2000). Deciphering the molecular events in plants under drought Plants respond to water deficit and adapt to semiarid drought conditions by various physiological, ARTICLE IN PRESS 1196 biochemical, anatomical, and morphological changes, including transitions in gene expression. Plants also adapt different types of life strategies to cope and resist drought stress. Two such strategies are drought avoidance and drought tolerance. Drought avoidance is the ability of the plant to maintain high tissue water potential under drought conditions, while drought tolerance is a plant’s ability to maintain its normal functions even at low tissue water potentials. Drought avoidance is usually achieved through morphological changes in the plant, such as reduced stomatal conductance, decreased leaf area, development of extensive root systems and increased root/shoot ratios (Levitt, 1980). On the other hand, drought tolerance is achieved by cell- and tissue-specific physiological, biochemical, and molecular mechanisms, which include specific gene expression and accumulation of specific proteins under drought stress. A variety of genes are induced by drought stress, and functions of such gene products have been predicted from sequence homology with known proteins (Bohnert and Jenson, 1996; Shinozaki et al., 1999). Drought stress-induced genes function, not only in protecting plant cells from dehydration, but also in regulating certain genes for signal transduction in response to drought. During the past two decades, several specific proteins have been characterized in droughtstressed plants that can be classified as LEA, dissication stress protein, response to ABA, dehydrins (dehydration-induced proteins), cold regulation proteins, proteases (for protein turnover), enzymes required for the biosynthesis of various osmoprotectants (sugars, proteins and GlyBet), the detoxification enzymes (SOD, CAT, APX, POD, GR), and protein factors involved in the regulation of signal transduction and gene expression, such as protein kinases and transcription factors (Tzvi et al., 2000). The mRNAs corresponding to the genes of antioxidant enzymes are induced by drought stress (Xu et al., 1996). Transgenic plants expressing LEA proteins exhibited more tolerance to water deficit conditions (Bray, 2002). Some of the stress-inducible genes that encode proteins, such as D1 pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthase (P5CS, a key enzyme for proline biosynthesis), was overexpressed in transgenic plants to produce a stress tolerant plant (Kishore et al., 1995). Dehydrins are another group of drought-induced proteins with a consensus 15-amino acid sequence (EKKGIMDKIKEKLPG), that is involved in hydrophobic interactions leading to macromolecule stabilization and that may act synergistically with compatible solutes (Close, 1996). Plastid lipid-associated proteins, termed fibrillin/chloroplastic drought stress A.R. Reddy et al. protein-34 proteins, substantially increased in several dicot and monocot plants in response to water deficit (Langenkaneper et al., 2001). Plant fibrillins have been reported to stabilize hydrophobic carotenoids as well as to participate in the structural stabilization and protection of thylakoids during dehydration (Schwartz et al., 2001). The accumulation of free proline in response to osmotic stress is known to be regulated by a rate-limiting enzyme P5CS in higher plants and antisense transgenics of Arabidopsis with P5CS cDNA showed morphological alterations in leaves that were hypersensitive to osmotic stress (Nanjo et al., 1999). In these plants, proline deficiency specifically affected structural proteins of cell walls, suggesting that proline is not only an osmoreuglator in stressed plants but it is also involved in osmotolerance and morphogenesis in plants. The characterization of biosynthetic pathways leading to different compatible solutes (polyols, sugars, aminoacids, GlyBet, and related compounds) and the exploitation of different genes through transgenic plant research suggest the importance of the accumulation of these compounds in the acclimatization of plants to drought stress (Sakamoto and Murata, 2002). Transgenic production of these compatible solutes can protect plants to a greater extent from stress, even when they are present at low and osmotically insignificant levels (Sakamoto and Murata, 2002). There has been considerable progress recently in the molecular characterization of GlyBet biosynthesis, which encouraged the introduction of GlyBet biosynthetic enzymes into GlyBet-deficient plants. The first demonstration in plants of engineered synthesis of GlyBet showed over-expression of the gene for choline oxidase (COD) from Arthrobacter globiformis in the chloroplasts of Arabidopsis and rice (Hayashi et al., 1997; Sakomoto et al., 1998). GlyBet accumulated at a concentration of 50–100 mM in the chloroplasts. Tobacco has been engineered to produce bacterial choline dehydrogenase (CDH) and COD as well as plant CMO (Ain-Lhout et al., 2001). Metabolic engineering of choline biosynthesis in plants could enhance plants’ resistance to osmotic stress. The key enzyme of the plant choline synthesis pathway is phosphoethanolamine-N-methyl transferase and over-expression of this enzyme in transgenic tobacco increased the phosphocholine by 5-fold and the free choline by 50-fold (Mc Neil et al., 2001). The capacity of such transgenic plants to accumulate GlyBet seems to depend on the plant species and on the subcellular localization of the engineered enzyme. ARTICLE IN PRESS Photosynthetic and antioxidant responses under drought stress Complex mechanisms seem to be involved in gene expression and signal transduction in response to drought stress. However, the precise molecular mechanisms of regulation of plant genes to water deficit conditions remain elusive. The expression patterns of genes induced by drought stress indicate broad variations in the timing of induction of different genes. Many drought-inducible genes are known to respond to ABA levels in leaves (Shinozaki and YamaguchiShinozaki, 1999; Zhu, 2002). Mutants with ABA deficiency were used to analyze drought-inducible genes and the results indicate that several genes are induced by exogenous ABA treatment. There are ABA-independent and ABA-dependent regulatory systems of gene expression under drought stress. Several mutants in ABA signaling have been identified and their genes encode protein phosphatase and farnesyl transferase (Qin and Zeevart, 2002). These studies clearly indicate that protein dephosphorylation and protein farnesylation are involved in ABA signaling. The role of ABA in drought-stress signal transduction has been genetically analyzed with ABA insensitive mutants in several plant species. Maize vp1 and Arabidpsis abi1, abi2, abi3 and abi4 have been extensively characterized and their genes have been cloned (Bonetta and Mc Court, 1998). Two steps in the conversion of xanthoxin to ABA aldehyde and oxidation of ABA-aldehyde to ABA are determined by Arabidopsis aba2 and aba3 mutants, respectively (Marin et al., 1996). Recently, Iuchi et al. (2000) showed that the cowpea drought inducible VuNCED1 gene encodes the 9-cisepoxy-carotenoid dioxygenase, a key enzyme in ABA biosynthesis and its product is localized in plastids. Analysis of transgenic plants in which the VuNCED1 gene is over-expressed or suppressed by antisense RNA should give us more information on its function in ABA biosynthesis in drought-stressed plants. However, the molecular mechanism of regulation of ABA biosynthesis under stress conditions is yet to be established. Further, nitrate reductase activity decreased under drought stress in a number of plant species and was strongly downregulated at the mRNA level in Arabidopsis (Foyer et al., 1998). A number of genes induced by water deficit may also be predicted to play a role in altering cell wall characteristics, including a polygalactouronase-like gene product (Bray, 2002). Microarray assays using full-length cDNAs obtained from Arabidopsis plants subjected to different stresses have recently been reported (Seki et al., 2001). The physiological, biochemical and molecular responses to drought stress in higher plants are summarized in Fig. 1. 1197 Perspectives of future research Plant productivity is greatly affected by environmental stresses, and drought stress is among the worst scourges of agriculture. Water deficit occurs, not only during drought, but also during cold conditions and causes turgor stress at the cellular level. Thus, a change in the osmotic potential across the plasma membrane should be one of the triggers of the stress response at the molecular level, thus resulting in an oxidative burst under drought stress conditions. An understanding of the mechanistic basis for changes in plant gene expression in response to environmental cues is beginning to emerge. The foremost challenge in improving the crop productivity in the near future is to identify molecular events for better understanding of how to improve drought tolerance. During the last 10 years, many drought-induced genes have been cloned in a variety of plants. The transcriptional regulatory regions of drought-induced genes should be completely analyzed to understand the expression of these genes under water-deficit. The Arabidopsis genome project is to assign functions to all the 20,000 genes of Arabidopsis by 2010, which should give us complete metabolic maps of related genes. Assessing the relative contribution of each gene to dehydration tolerance and eliminating those that do not measurably effect stress tolerance is a major challenge. All recent transgenic approaches used single genes that led to marginal stress tolerance. Hence, future work should introduce sets of genes in order to express quantitative traits, determined by multiple genes, under drought stress. Metabolic engineering of osmoprotectant pathways was successful for certain model plants subjected to stress. But there is a long way to raise the accumulation levels of these osmoprotectants to overcome side effects related to accumulation and to prove the value of engineered osmoprotectants in major crops under field stress conditions. We are now moving towards a complete understanding of the whole plant signaling process and the intensity of chemical signaling under drought. These signals may vary between environments and plant species. The actual role of the ascorbate-glutathione cycle should provide a valuable intellectual framework, which will contribute to an exciting area of stress relations in higher plants. The identification of factors that sense alterations in glutathione pool will be a valuable addition to the tools that are available for manipulation of plant stress responses. We can also expect rapid progress in a better understanding of AA metabolism, eventually leading to controlled manipulation of AA content ARTICLE IN PRESS 1198 A.R. Reddy et al. Fig. 1. Physiological, Biochemical and Molecular responses to drought stress in higher plants. for improved nutritional quality and drought stress resistance. The role of AA in a wide number of cellular processes influences growth and development of plants. The goal of increasing AA biosynthesis in transgenic plants should be aimed at improving the stress tolerance in plants. To date, no AA transporters across the cell membrane have been identified. Future work on AA biosynthesis and its regulation should greatly benefit all fields of plant biology. Despite recent progress in characterization of the protective action of proline and GlyBet in transgenic plants, there remains a critical gap, in terms of protective effects of these osmoprotectants between phenomena in vivo and in vitro. Our understanding of ABA action at the molecular level during drought stress is incomplete. It is important to consider that ABA signaling is part of a complex web of stress pathways. It would be also interesting to know whether inhibitors of translational processing have effects on ABA-inducible gene expression in plants under drought stress. Signaling pathways concerning the initiation by different stressors, such as drought, salt, UV radiation, and ozone, might change gene expression or the amount and activity of different proteins, but these are not yet established. Therefore, the drought and salt signal transduction pathways and the fine tuning of plant sensing and signaling systems to unfavorable environments are still in need of further study. Molecular analysis of these factors should provide a better understanding of the signal transduction cascades under drought stress. The interactive effects of elevated CO2 concentrations and drought/salt stress on physiological, biochemical, and molecular responses of plants in the changing global climate scenario are still far from yielding a clear picture. Also, our knowledge of the metabolic changes that contribute to dehydration tolerance is limited. Recently, the role of ROS-scavenging systems in plant stress tolerance has gained attention through the use of transgenic approaches by manipulating the levels of antioxidant enzymes. Therefore, it is conceivable that decreasing oxidative stress offers an avenue to counter the effects of environmental stresses. Such studies are to be extended to the whole plant level and the impact of gene expression under drought on several plant metabolic ARTICLE IN PRESS Photosynthetic and antioxidant responses under drought stress processes is to be assessed. 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