Plant Cellular Homeostasis and Reprogramming during Stress
A special issue of Plants (ISSN 2223-7747). This special issue belongs to the section "Plant Cell Biology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 November 2022) | Viewed by 20750
Special Issue Editors
Interests: plant stress physiology; protein homeostasis; transcriptional regulation; crop improvement
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Biotic and abiotic stresses induce a plethora of changes to cellular homeostasis. From early signaling events to transcriptional reprogramming to alterations in the proteomic landscape, plants adapt various strategies to cope during and after stress. These changes determine the fate of the recovery process. To maintain and re-establish cellular homeostasis, the whole signaling machinery is important. This is regulated at different levels as well. Recent advances/breakthroughs in the concerned field have provided us with a significant understanding of the underlying mechanism; however, various questions and challenges remain unanswered.
Therefore, in this Special Issue of “Plant Cellular Homeostasis and Reprogramming during Stress” in Plants, we are encouraging the submission of original research papers, perspectives, hypotheses, opinions, reviews, modeling approaches, and methods. The issue will focus on various aspects of stress physiology, such as how plant homeostasis is maintained in response to different environmental/biological factors; what the signaling components are and how the signal is percolated inside the cell; what the receptors, messengers, kinases involved are and how they are regulated at different levels; how transcription of genes involved in homeostasis are regulated; how translational/post-translational machinery behaves; what the various components of degradome are; and what the fate is of misfolded/aggregate proteins/different components of the pathway. Plants, being sessile, have to encounter various stresses simultaneously or subsequently. Evolution has facilitated various adaptive strategies to counter, adjust, and recover from these stress. Therefore, it is necessary that we understand these phenomena/mechanisms that help plants to maintain their cellular homeostasis post-stress.
Dr. Ujjal Jyoti Phukan
Dr. Núria Sánchez Coll
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- Protein homeostasis
- Transcriptional/translational alteration
- Cellular reprogramming
- Stress response
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