Protein kinase and phosphatase control of plant temperature responses

Publication date

2021-11-20

Authors

Praat, MyrtheISNI 0000000492915469
De Smet, Ive
van Zanten, MartijnISNI 0000000393000140

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Plants must cope with ever-changing temperature conditions in their environment. Suboptimal high and low temperatures, and stressful extreme temperatures, induce adaptive mechanisms that allow optimal performance and survival, respectively. These processes have been extensively studied at the physiological, transcriptional and (epi)genetic level. Cellular temperature signalling cascades and tolerance mechanisms also involve post-translational modifications (PTMs), particularly protein phosphorylation. Many protein kinases are known to be involved in cold acclimation and heat stress responsiveness but research on the role and importance of kinases and phosphatases in triggering responses to mild changes in temperature such as thermomorphogenesis is inadequately understood. In this review, we summarize the current knowledge on the roles of kinases and phosphatases in plant temperature responses. We discuss how kinases can function over a range of temperatures in different signalling pathways and provide an outlook to the application of PTM-modifying factors for the development of thermotolerant crops.

Keywords

Cold acclimation, heat stress, kinases, phosphatases, temperature acclimation, thermomorphogenesis

Citation

Praat, M, De Smet, I & van Zanten, M 2021, 'Protein kinase and phosphatase control of plant temperature responses', Journal of Experimental Botany, vol. 72, no. 21, pp. 7459–7473. https://doi.org/10.1093/jxb/erab345