About this Research Topic
Global climate change is bringing new challenges to natural ecosystems around the world. Increasing temperatures and soil salinity levels are contributing to plant abiotic stress, with direct consequences for agricultural crop production. Drought and hyper-salinity are the primary cause of crop loss worldwide. In plants, alternative splicing is of growing importance as more genes are found to undergo AS, which may impact strategies for improving plant phenotypes. More research is needed to understand how alternative splicing modulates plant development and the response to environmental stress. Understanding how AS affects abiotic stress tolerance in crop plants may provide new insights into improving the resilience and productivity of crop plants.
This Research Topic welcomes original research, review, mini-review, and methods papers related to the following areas, but not limited to:
• Molecular mechanism of alternative splicing (AS) in response to abiotic stress such as heat, cold, drought, flood, salinity, etc.
• Identification and characterization of splicing factors and the key spliceosome components that exert plant abiotic stress responses.
• Genomics, proteomics, metabolomics and transcriptomics analyses of AS in response to climate change and abiotic stresses.
• Evolutionary study of AS and RNA splicing regulators in stress responses.
• Approaches to investigate how AS acclimates to environmental changes, such as CRISPR-Cas mediated gene editing in economic plants or machine learning to identify the AS pattern in response to abiotic stresses.
Keywords: Alternative splicing, Abiotic Stress, RNA splicing, spliceosome, crop
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.