AUTHOR=Bokszczanin Kamila L., Fragkostefanakis Sotirios , Bostan Hamed , Bovy Arnaud , Chaturvedi Palak , Chiusano Maria L., Firon Nurit , Iannacone Rina , Jegadeesan Sridharan , Klaczynskid Krzysztof , Li Hanjing , Mariani Celestina , Müller Florian , Paul Puneet , Paupiere Marine , Pressman Etan , Rieu Ivo , Scharf Klaus D., Schleiff Enrico , Van Heusden Adriaan W., Vriezen Wim , Weckwerth Wolfram , Winter Peter TITLE=Perspectives on deciphering mechanisms underlying plant heat stress response and thermotolerance JOURNAL=Frontiers in Plant Science VOLUME=4 YEAR=2013 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/plant-science/articles/10.3389/fpls.2013.00315 DOI=10.3389/fpls.2013.00315 ISSN=1664-462X ABSTRACT=

Global warming is a major threat for agriculture and food safety and in many cases the negative effects are already apparent. The current challenge of basic and applied plant science is to decipher the molecular mechanisms of heat stress response (HSR) and thermotolerance in detail and use this information to identify genotypes that will withstand unfavorable environmental conditions. Nowadays X-omics approaches complement the findings of previous targeted studies and highlight the complexity of HSR mechanisms giving information for so far unrecognized genes, proteins and metabolites as potential key players of thermotolerance. Even more, roles of epigenetic mechanisms and the involvement of small RNAs in thermotolerance are currently emerging and thus open new directions of yet unexplored areas of plant HSR. In parallel it is emerging that although the whole plant is vulnerable to heat, specific organs are particularly sensitive to elevated temperatures. This has redirected research from the vegetative to generative tissues. The sexual reproduction phase is considered as the most sensitive to heat and specifically pollen exhibits the highest sensitivity and frequently an elevation of the temperature just a few degrees above the optimum during pollen development can have detrimental effects for crop production. Compared to our knowledge on HSR of vegetative tissues, the information on pollen is still scarce. Nowadays, several techniques for high-throughput X-omics approaches provide major tools to explore the principles of pollen HSR and thermotolerance mechanisms in specific genotypes. The collection of such information will provide an excellent support for improvement of breeding programs to facilitate the development of tolerant cultivars. The review aims at describing the current knowledge of thermotolerance mechanisms and the technical advances which will foster new insights into this process.