About this Research Topic
The blossoming of omics technologies, from transcriptomics and proteomics to metabolomics and phenomics, as well as their increasing accessibility and decreasing costs, have enabled the application of omics technologies in crop research, improving our understanding of crops in unprecedented ways. Recent breakthroughs in the genomics of various biomass and bioenergy crops such as sorghum, sugarcane, miscanthus, and switchgrass have laid the groundwork for a mechanistic understanding of biomass production. Despite the broad application of omics techniques, especially RNA-seq, we emphasize that the integration of multiple omics techniques, including genomics, epigenomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics, and phenomics, is of great importance to gain new insights in plant research. The synergistic integration of multiple omic technologies as well as genomic population datasets enables more comprehensive studies and provides approaches to circumvent the limitations in plant studies. The goal of this Research Topic is to demonstrate the power of multi-omics in understanding biomass production and the composition of herbaceous biomass plants.
This Research Topic aims to provide new insights into biological issues related to biomass production and composition using herbaceous biomass and bioenergy crops as research models, integrating multi-omics as an approach. We welcome submissions of various types of manuscripts, including but not limited to research on the following sub-themes:
1.Studies to gain insights into key biological questions related to biomass production and variation in biomass composition using multi-omics approaches;
2.Studies to decipher causal genes and genetic structures of biomass-related traits or specific biomass compositions and metabolites using multi-omics approaches;
3.Studies to uncover the divergence and conservation of the genome, epigenome and gene regulation of biomass crops in the context of biomass production.
We welcome hypothesis-driven submissions. Please note that descriptive studies without significant biological advances or those that relate only to model species will not be considered. We require that the research use at least two types of omic technologies. High biomass grasses, including sorghum, maize, sugarcane, miscanthus, and switchgrass, are the preferred species for this Research Topic, while other multi-omic driven research focusing on biomass production in major crops (e.g., wheat and rice) may be considered. Woody plants with biomass and bioenergy use fall outside the scope of this Research Topic.
Keywords: Biomass and Bioenergy Crops, Genomics, Multi-omics, Biomass production, Bioinformatics
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.