Phytochrome-mediated shade-avoidance responses and its impact on growth and physiology in crops-A review.
Surya K, Krishnan R, Saitheja V, Janaki P, Parameswari E
Plant Signaling
PubMedIt explains why densely planted crops or garden beds with tall neighbors often underperform, and how scientists might breed or engineer plants that thrive in those shaded conditions — meaning more food from the same patch of land.
Plants can sense when they're being shaded by neighbors — not by 'seeing' darkness, but by detecting a shift in the color of light filtering through leaves. This triggers a chain reaction: the plant stretches toward the light, rearranges its hormones, and shifts when it flowers, all as a survival strategy. This review maps out exactly how those light sensors and their downstream signals work in food crops, which is key to understanding why shade hurts harvests.
Key Findings
Phytochromes detect shade by sensing a drop in the red-to-far-red light ratio, triggering the shade-avoidance syndrome — a coordinated set of growth and developmental changes across the whole plant.
Shade stress disrupts multiple critical processes simultaneously: photosynthetic efficiency, hormonal balance (including auxin and gibberellin), gene expression networks, and total biomass accumulation.
Different crop types (likely C3 and C4 plants) show distinct shade-response profiles, suggesting that crop-specific breeding strategies will be needed to improve shade tolerance.
chevron_right Technical Summary
This review examines how crops detect and respond to shade using specialized light sensors called phytochromes, which measure the ratio of red to far-red light. When shaded, plants trigger a cascade of hormonal and genetic changes that reshape growth, photosynthesis, and flowering — with major consequences for agricultural yield.
Abstract Preview
Shade stress is a critical environmental constraint that significantly affects plant growth, development, and productivity. Phytochromes, as red and far-red light photoreceptors, play a central rol...
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