Developmental and Genetic Mechanisms of Floral Structure
A special issue of Plants (ISSN 2223-7747). This special issue belongs to the section "Plant Development and Morphogenesis".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 October 2021) | Viewed by 24857
Special Issue Editors
Interests: floral evolution and development; phylogeny; floral symmetry; evolutionary ecology; floral evolution in Ranunculales
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Flowering plants are by far the most diverse group of land plants in terms of species number and morphology. Along with the progress achieved in describing in detail floral development in an increasing number of species, impressive advances have been made since the beginning of the 21st Century in unraveling the genes underlying the strikingly conserved floral general organization, in addition to the extraordinary variation in size, shape, color, and number of floral organs. Evo–devo studies built on advanced research on the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana have shown that this conservation is due to a shared genetic program (the ABCE model) responsible for floral organ identity. Progress has also been made in identifying genes involved in specific floral features, such as floral bilateral symmetry or spur development. In parallel, phylogenetic relationships among the 400+ families of angiosperms have become increasingly resolved, providing a robust framework to study patterns of floral evolution and development and distinguish conserved from lineage-specific patterns. Beyond Arabidopsis, research on floral development using novel model plants is rapidly accumulating, and the diversity and evolution of genes and gene networks at play in the making of specific traits are being deciphered.
This Special Issue will gather articles (including original research papers, reviews, methods or opinions) that focus on floral development, from genes to morphology. A specific focus will be put on novel model organisms or clades that are now amenable to analysis thanks to new methodologies, such as the various high throughput omics, 3D imagery, morphometric geometrics, and ancestral state reconstruction methods.
Prof. Dr. Sophie Nadot
Prof. Dr. Catherine Damerval
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- floral development
- floral organogenesis
- floral evolution
- floral homeotic genes
- floral transcription factors
- floral meristems
- floral regulators
- floral gene networks
- floral gene regulatory networks
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