Epigenetics and Genome Evolution in Plants
A special issue of Plants (ISSN 2223-7747). This special issue belongs to the section "Plant Genetics, Genomics and Biotechnology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2024) | Viewed by 18390
Special Issue Editor
Interests: plant genomics; epigenetics; plant physiology; plant development; genome evolution; plant cytogenetics; stress tolerance; next-generation sequencing; ChIP-seq; proteomics; protein–protein interaction; genome editing
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Accumulating evidence many of those were from plant systems suggests the contribution of epigenetic mechanisms to genome evolution. For example, DNA methylation is vital for the silencing of transposable elements, enabling the colonization of a substantial proportion of repetitive sequences in plant genomes. During evolution, these genomic elements are capable of moving and self-replicating in germlines in waves (i.e., epigenetic assimilation), potentially resulting in genetic diversity and genome plasticity. Furthermore, these epigenetically controlled dynamics may also steer the ecological and evolutionary advantage of hybridization and polyploid events by perhaps modulating the transcriptional expression of nearby genes. This special issue aims to collect a wide body of research studies dealing with epigenomics, population epigenetics, and functional genomics in model and non-model plant species that have significant relevance in genome evolution, adaptation, ecological speciation, and diversification.
Dr. Xuan Hieu Cao
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- ecological speciation
- environmental adaptation
- epialleles
- epigenetic and transcriptional networks
- epigenetic inheritance
- epigenomics
- genome evolution
- genome/epigenetic editing
- population epigenetics
- microRNA
- non-coding RNA
- DNA methylation
- histone modification
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