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Rhizospheric Microbial Inoculation in Developing Stress Tolerance
SAR have diverse gene induction and expression patterns that are dependent
on the eliciting and regulatory pathways (Nawrocka & Maolepsza, 2013).
Under biotic stress, PGPM induce SAR, that includes the assemblage of PR
proteins and SA, whereas ISR depends on pathways associated with the regu
lation of jasmonate and ethylene (Salas-Marina et al., 2011; Bari & Jones,
2009). The NOS (nitrogen-oxygen species) as well as ROS (reactive oxygen
species) have a significant impact on the generation of SA, JA, and ET, and
they create a complicated networks that modulates pathogens (Bari & Jones,
2009; Choudhary & Johri, 2009). The ethylene and regulatory factors play a
crucial while the PR genes are expressing themselves.
2.8 CONCLUSION
Plant growth characteristics, productivity, and survivability are all affected
by various kinds of abiotic and biotic stressors. Those crops and plants that
can substitute their physio-biological properties because of the exhibition of
salinity, drought, heat, cold, and alkalinity tolerant proteins can withstand
stress conditions. Crop output, quality of food, and universal food security
are all hampered by these pressures. Imbalance in hormones, nutrient mobili
zation, toxicity of ions, and disease vulnerability are all continuing to wreak
havoc on maturation and survivability of the plant in the current climate.
The only other option for dealing with plant stressors is by the develop
ment of microbiological contrivances and procedures for soil-plant-microbe
interaction.
KEYWORDS
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abiotic stress
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drought
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heavy metal stress
•
microbial inoculation
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salinity
•
tolerance