Updates on Abiotic Stress Signaling and Response in Plants
A special issue of Life (ISSN 2075-1729). This special issue belongs to the section "Plant Science".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 March 2023) | Viewed by 11690
Special Issue Editors
Interests: rice; heavy metals; nutrient deficiency; physiological process
Interests: abiotic stress; rhizo-microbiome; plant–microbe interactions
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: plant nutrition; nutrient deficiency; mineral stress; plant stress physiology
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Plants often suffer from unfavorable or stressful environments, which can affect their growth and development. Abiotic stress, such as drought, extreme temperatures, nutrient deficiency, salinization, and excess of toxic metals such as Al, Cd, As, and Pb in the soil significantly inhibit plant growth and limit plant productivity in agricultural systems, which largely threaten food security for humans around the world. Plant cells are capable of sensing various environmental signals with different regulatory mechanisms, such as changes in gene expression, metabolism, and physiology activity, to cope with abiotic stress. Determining how plants sense stress signals and adapt to adverse environments is critical for the improvement of plant growth and agricultural productivity.
This Special Issue of Life aims to publish the latest research progress on the signals of molecular and stress sensors involved in plant response to abiotic stress and their underling mechanisms. In addition, research papers on advanced methods that help to improve plant growth and production under environmental stress are also encouraged. For this Special Issue, we welcome investigators to contribute original research articles and review papers.
Dr. Chunquan Zhu
Dr. Yali Kong
Dr. Wenhao Tian
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- abiotic stress
- molecular signal
- stress sensors
- mechanism of plant response to abiotic stress
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