Next Article in Journal
Arabidopsis NPF4.6 and NPF5.1 Control Leaf Stomatal Aperture by Regulating Abscisic Acid Transport
Next Article in Special Issue
The Effect of Exogenous Nitrate on LCO Signalling, Cytokinin Accumulation, and Nodule Initiation in Medicago truncatula
Previous Article in Journal
The Combined Human Genotype of Truncating TTN and RBM20 Mutations Is Associated with Severe and Early Onset of Dilated Cardiomyopathy
Previous Article in Special Issue
Nitrate Modulates Lateral Root Formation by Regulating the Auxin Response and Transport in Rice
 
 
Review
Peer-Review Record

Lateral Root Initiation and the Analysis of Gene Function Using Genome Editing with CRISPR in Arabidopsis

by Nick Vangheluwe 1,2 and Tom Beeckman 1,2,*
Reviewer 1: Anonymous
Reviewer 2: Anonymous
Submission received: 18 May 2021 / Revised: 4 June 2021 / Accepted: 7 June 2021 / Published: 8 June 2021

Round 1

Reviewer 1 Report

Root branching through later root formation is very important for the adaptability of the root system to its environment. Lateral root development is is tightly regulated and auxin serves as a major regulator of lateral root development. Here the authors provided an overview of the visible events, cell cycle regulators and auxin signaling cascades related to the development of lateral root. And CRISPR genome editing system can be used as an important tool to analyse gene function specifically in lateral root initiation and contributed to a better understanding of fundamental developmental processes. The paper is well written and the authors proved a lot of references to supports their viewpoints. I this this paper is suitable for publication in Genes.

Author Response

We thank the reviewer for his/her positive evaluation of our manuscript. No changes were requested by this reviewer

Reviewer 2 Report

The manuscript entitled " Lateral root initiation and the analysis of gene function using genome editing with CRISPR in Arabidopsis " sets out to review lateral root initiation and development and the use of CRISPR technology to study gene function for more understanding of the mechanism. The review is on a topic of relevance and general interest to the readers of the journal. I found the manuscript to be overall well written and felt confident that the authors highlighted important points related to the topic. However, I have a few concerns that should be addressed before publication.

  • The authors are highly recommended to avoid using a personal pronoun (e.g., We, our, etc.); they can use the third party in the past tense's passive voice.
  • The authors need carefully to read the manuscript to correct typos and grammars to improve the manuscript.
  • Any abbreviation must be associated with the full name at the first mention in the abstract and main text, then just use the abbreviation.

Author Response

  • The authors are highly recommended to avoid using a personal pronoun (e.g., We, our, etc.); they can use the third party in the past tense's passive voice. Where possible we avoided using personal pronouns as indicated by the track changes.
  • The authors need carefully to read the manuscript to correct typos and grammars to improve the manuscript. The manuscript has been checked for typos and grammar.
  • Any abbreviation must be associated with the full name at the first mention in the abstract and main text, then just use the abbreviation. Abbreviations were re-checked and full names were used at first mentioning (see track changes).
Back to TopTop