Grafting is a technique that involves attaching a rootstock to the aerial part of another genotype or species (scion), leading to improved crop performance and sustainable growth. The ability to tolerate abiotic stresses depends on cell membrane stability, a reduction in electrolyte leakage, and the species of scion and rootstock chosen. This external mechanism, grafting, serves as a beneficial tool in influencing crop performance by combining nutrient uptake and translocation to shoots, promoting sustainable plant growth, and enhancing the potential yield of both fruit and vegetable crops. Grafting helps to enhance crop production and improve the capacity of plants to utilize water when undergoing abiotic stress, particularly in genotypes that produce high yields upon rootstocks that are capable of decreasing the impact of drought stress on the shoot. The rootstock plays a pivotal role in establishing a grafted plant by forming a union between the graft and the rootstock. This process is characterized by its integrative, reciprocal nature, enabling plants to tolerate abiotic stress conditions. Grafting has been shown to alleviate the overproduction of lipid peroxidation and reactive oxygen species in the leaves and roots and enhance drought tolerance in plants by maintaining antioxidant enzyme activities and stress-responsive gene expression. Phytohormones, such as cytokinin, auxin, and gibberellin, play a critical role in maintaining rootstock-scion interactions. This review unveils the role of grafting in mitigating various environmental stressors, establishment of a robust graft junction, physiology of rootstock-scion communication, the mechanism underlying rootstock influence, hormonal regulations and the utilization of agri-bots in perfect healing and further cultivation of vegetable crops through grafting.
Keywords: abiotic stress; automation; crop physiology; crop productivity; molecular physiology; plant grafting; stress management.
© 2024 The Author(s). Plant Direct published by American Society of Plant Biologists and the Society for Experimental Biology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.