Biochemical and Molecular Regulations of Priming: How Plants Enhance Their Defence against Environmental Pressures
A special issue of International Journal of Molecular Sciences (ISSN 1422-0067). This special issue belongs to the section "Molecular Plant Sciences".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 November 2021) | Viewed by 29538
Special Issue Editors
Interests: drought; plant ecophysiology; plant hormones; polyphenols; secondary metabolites; water relations
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: plant-microbe interactions, mycorrhizal fungi, response to environmental stresses
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Plants are exposed to a combination of recurring abiotic and biotic stresses. These detrimental effects are exacerbated by climate change, which is leading to a rapid decline of crop productivity and pushes forest tree populations and species to the limits of their ecological tolerance. However, plants, in addition to their adaptive genetic variation in traits linked to climate, can also rely on the so-called “priming of defence,” which results in a faster, stronger, and more efficient resistance response upon subsequent pathogen attack or stressful events. Primed condition can be reached through the application of chemical compounds but also by beneficial soil microorganisms, such as rhizobacteria and root-associated fungi. Recently, new research frontiers have been also investigated, such as the beneficial plant-virus interactions and the possibility to exploit the innate plant silencing pathway using double stranded RNAs (dsRNAs). In a primed plant, several changes take place at the physiological, molecular, and/or epigenetic levels, and this information is stored (by the memory effect), allowing a more robust defence in the presence of a challenge, i.e., biotic and abiotic stresses. This Special Issue is open to both research and review papers focused on the investigation of the mechanisms leading to priming status in a plant.
Dr. Cecilia Brunetti
Prof. Dr. Raffaella Maria Balestrini
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- abiotic and biotic stresses
- plant defence
- arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi
- root-associated microbes
- volatile organic compounds
- secondary metabolites
- biochemical responses
- gene expression
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