Dehydrin proteins (late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) D11 family)
are
produced in a wide variety of plant
species in response to environmental stimuli with a dehydrative component,
including drought, low temperature,
salinity, and developmental stages such as seed and pollen maturation.
Despite their widespread occurrence and
abundance in cells under dehydrative conditions, the biochemical role of
dehydrins remains elusive. The
subcellular location of dehydrins is consistent with a biochemical role
as
an intracellular stabilizer, possibly with
surfactant characteristics, acting upon targets in both the nucleus and
cytoplasm. In some species, dehydrin loci
are located within quantitative trait loci (QTL) intervals for important
phenotypic traits including winter
hardiness in barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and anthesis-silking
interval
in maize (Zea mays L.). Dehydrin loci tend
to be multigenic and occur in clusters on more than one chromosome.
Investigations are currently under way in
our laboratory and others' to move beyond protein accumulation studies
and correlations with QTL to uncover
direct cause-and-effect relationships between dehydrin (dhn) genes and
phenotypes associated with physiological responses to stress.