Geography, altitude, agriculture, and hypoxia

Publication date

2025-01

Authors

Holdsworth, Michael J.
Liu, Huanhuan
Castellana, Simone
Abbas, Mohamad
Liu, Jianquan
Perata, Pierdomenico

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Reduced oxygen availability (hypoxia) represents a key plant abiotic stress in natural and agricultural systems, but conversely it is also an important component of normal growth and development. We review recent advances that demonstrate how genetic adaptations associated with hypoxia impact the known plant oxygen-sensing mechanism through the PLANT CYSTEINE OXIDASE N-degron pathway. Only 3 protein substrates of this pathway have been identified, and all adaptations identified to date are associated with the most important of these, the group VII ETHYLENE RESPONSE FACTOR transcription factors. We discuss how geography, altitude, and agriculture have all shaped molecular responses to hypoxia and how these responses have emerged at different taxonomic levels through the evolution of land plants. Understanding how ecological and agricultural genetic variation acts positively to enhance hypoxia tolerance will provide novel tools and concepts to improve the performance of crops in the face of increasing extreme flooding events.

Keywords

Physiology, Genetics, Plant Science

Citation

Holdsworth, M J, Liu, H, Castellana, S, Abbas, M, Liu, J & Perata, P 2025, 'Geography, altitude, agriculture, and hypoxia', Plant Physiology, vol. 197, no. 1, kiae535. https://doi.org/10.1093/plphys/kiae535