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The Author(s) 2013

Abstract

Plants, as sessile organisms experience various abiotic stresses, which pose serious threat to crop production. Plants adapt to environmental stress by modulating their growth and development along with the various physiological and biochemical changes. This phenotypic plasticity is driven by the activation of specific genes encoding signal transduction, transcriptional regulation, ion transporters and metabolic pathways. Rice is an important staple food crop of nearly half of the world population and is well known to be a salt sensitive crop. The completion and enhanced annotations of rice genome sequence has provided the opportunity to study functional genomics of rice. Functional genomics aids in understanding the molecular and physiological basis to improve the salinity tolerance for sustainable rice production. Salt tolerant transgenic rice plants have been produced by incorporating various genes into rice. In this review we present the findings and investigations in the field of rice functional genomics that includes supporting genes and networks (ABA dependent and independent), osmoprotectants (proline, glycine betaine, trehalose, myo-inositol, and fructans), signaling molecules (Ca^sup 2+^, abscisic acid, jasmonic acid, brassinosteroids) and transporters, regulating salt stress response in rice.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Insights into genomics of salt stress response in rice
Author
Kumar, Kundan; Kumar, Manu; Kim, Seong-ryong; Ryu, Hojin; Cho, Yong-gu
Pages
1-15
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Oct 2013
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
19398425
e-ISSN
19348037
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1449258619
Copyright
The Author(s) 2013