Genes (Sep 2021)

Histone Acetylation Changes in Plant Response to Drought Stress

  • Shuang Li,
  • Xu He,
  • Yuan Gao,
  • Chenguang Zhou,
  • Vincent L. Chiang,
  • Wei Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes12091409
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. 1409

Abstract

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Drought stress causes recurrent damage to a healthy ecosystem because it has major adverse effects on the growth and productivity of plants. However, plants have developed drought avoidance and resilience for survival through many strategies, such as increasing water absorption and conduction, reducing water loss and conversing growth stages. Understanding how plants respond and regulate drought stress would be important for creating and breeding better plants to help maintain a sound ecosystem. Epigenetic marks are a group of regulators affecting drought response and resilience in plants through modification of chromatin structure to control the transcription of pertinent genes. Histone acetylation is an ubiquitous epigenetic mark. The level of histone acetylation, which is regulated by histone acetyltransferases (HATs) and histone deacetylases (HDACs), determines whether the chromatin is open or closed, thereby controlling access of DNA-binding proteins for transcriptional activation. In this review, we summarize histone acetylation changes in plant response to drought stress, and review the functions of HATs and HDACs in drought response and resistance.

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