Rani Anju, Devi Poonam, Jha Uday Chand, Sharma Kamal Dev, Siddique Kadambot H M, Nayyar Harsh
Department of Botany, Panjab University, Chandigarh, India.
Department of Crop Improvement Division, Indian Institute of Pulses Research, Kanpur, India.
Front Plant Sci. 2020 Feb 25;10:1759. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2019.01759. eCollection 2019.
Chickpea is one of the most economically important food legumes, and a significant source of proteins. It is cultivated in more than 50 countries across Asia, Africa, Europe, Australia, North America, and South America. Chickpea production is limited by various abiotic stresses (cold, heat, drought, salt, .). Being a winter-season crop in northern south Asia and some parts of the Australia, chickpea faces low-temperature stress (0-15°C) during the reproductive stage that causes substantial loss of flowers, and thus pods, to inhibit its yield potential by 30-40%. The winter-sown chickpea in the Mediterranean, however, faces cold stress at vegetative stage. In late-sown environments, chickpea faces high-temperature stress during reproductive and pod filling stages, causing considerable yield losses. Both the low and the high temperatures reduce pollen viability, pollen germination on the stigma, and pollen tube growth resulting in poor pod set. Chickpea also experiences drought stress at various growth stages; terminal drought, along with heat stress at flowering and seed filling can reduce yields by 40-45%. In southern Australia and northern regions of south Asia, lack of chilling tolerance in cultivars delays flowering and pod set, and the crop is usually exposed to terminal drought. The incidences of temperature extremes (cold and heat) as well as inconsistent rainfall patterns are expected to increase in near future owing to climate change thereby necessitating the development of stress-tolerant and climate-resilient chickpea cultivars having region specific traits, which perform well under drought, heat, and/or low-temperature stress. Different approaches, such as genetic variability, genomic selection, molecular markers involving quantitative trait loci (QTLs), whole genome sequencing, and transcriptomics analysis have been exploited to improve chickpea production in extreme environments. Biotechnological tools have broadened our understanding of genetic basis as well as plants' responses to abiotic stresses in chickpea, and have opened opportunities to develop stress tolerant chickpea.
鹰嘴豆是经济上最重要的食用豆类之一,也是蛋白质的重要来源。它在亚洲、非洲、欧洲、澳大利亚、北美洲和南美洲的50多个国家种植。鹰嘴豆的生产受到各种非生物胁迫(寒冷、高温、干旱、盐分等)的限制。在南亚北部和澳大利亚的一些地区,鹰嘴豆作为冬季作物,在生殖阶段面临低温胁迫(0-15°C),这会导致大量花朵脱落,进而导致豆荚减少,使其产量潜力降低30-40%。然而,在地中海地区冬播的鹰嘴豆在营养阶段面临冷胁迫。在晚播环境中,鹰嘴豆在生殖和结荚期面临高温胁迫,导致产量大幅损失。低温和高温都会降低花粉活力、柱头花粉萌发率和花粉管生长,从而导致结荚不良。鹰嘴豆在各个生长阶段也会遭受干旱胁迫;花期和灌浆期的终末期干旱以及热胁迫可使产量降低40-45%。在澳大利亚南部和南亚北部地区,品种缺乏耐冷性会延迟开花和结荚,而且作物通常会遭遇终末期干旱。由于气候变化,预计在不久的将来极端温度(寒冷和高温)以及降雨模式不一致的情况将会增加,因此有必要培育具有区域特定性状、在干旱、高温和/或低温胁迫下表现良好的耐胁迫和适应气候变化的鹰嘴豆品种。人们已经采用了不同的方法,如遗传变异性、基因组选择、涉及数量性状位点(QTL)的分子标记、全基因组测序和转录组学分析,以提高鹰嘴豆在极端环境下的产量。生物技术工具拓宽了我们对鹰嘴豆遗传基础以及植物对非生物胁迫反应的理解,并为培育耐胁迫鹰嘴豆提供了机会。