AI Article Synopsis

  • Plant stress responses are managed by RNA binding proteins (RBPs) at multiple levels, influencing how plants adapt to challenging environmental conditions.
  • RBPs have specific RNA binding domains which help them regulate stress response genes vital for coping with abiotic stresses like drought, heat, salt, and cold.
  • The paper highlights the importance of both known and novel RBPs, suggests further research on less-characterized RBP genes, and discusses their potential in improving crops through genetic manipulation amid climate challenges.

Article Abstract

Plant abiotic stress responses are tightly regulated by different players at multiple levels. At transcriptional or post-transcriptional levels, several RNA binding proteins (RBPs) regulate stress response genes through RNA metabolism. They are increasingly recognized as critical modulators of a myriad of biological processes, including stress responses. Plant RBPs are heterogeneous with one or more conservative RNA motifs that constitute canonical/novel RNA binding domains (RBDs), which can bind to target RNAs to determine their regulation as per the plant requirements at given environmental conditions. Given its biological significance and possible consideration as a potential tool in genetic manipulation programs to improve key agronomic traits amidst frequent episodes of climate anomalies, studies concerning the identification and functional characterization of RBP candidate genes are steadily mounting. This paper presents a comprehensive overview of canonical and novel RBPs and their functions in major abiotic stresses including drought, heat, salt, and cold stress conditions. To some extent, we also briefly describe the basic motif structure of RBPs that would be useful in forthcoming studies. Additionally, we also collected RBP genes that were modulated by stress, but that lacked functional characterization, providing an impetus to conduct further research.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8269355PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms22136731DOI Listing

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