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This two-volume set takes an in-depth look at stress signaling in
plants from a uniquely genomic and proteomic perspective and offers
a comprehensive treatise that covers all of the signaling pathways
and mechanisms that have been researched so far. Currently, plant
diseases, extreme weather caused by climate change, drought and an
increase in metals in soil are amongst the major limiting factors
of crop production worldwide. They devastate not only the food
supply but also the economy of a nation. With global food scarcity
in mind, there is an urgent need to develop crop plants with
increased stress tolerance so as to meet the global food demands
and to preserve the quality of our planet. In order to do this, it
is necessary to understand how plants react and adapt to stress
from the genomic and proteomic perspective. Plants adapt to stress
conditions by activating cascades of molecular mechanisms, which
result in alterations in gene expression and synthesis of
protective proteins. From the perception of the stimulus to the
transduction of the signal, followed by an appropriate cellular
response, the plants employ a complex network of primary and
secondary messenger molecules. Cells exercise a large number of
noticeably distinct signaling pathways to regulate their activity.
In order to contend with different environmental adversities,
plants have developed a series of mechanisms at the physiological,
cellular and molecular levels that respond to stress. Each chapter
in this volume provides an in-depth explanation of what we
currently know of a particular aspect of stress signaling and where
we are heading. Together with the highly successful first volume,
Stress Signaling in Plants: Genomics and Proteomics Perspective,
Volume 2 covers an important aspect of plant biology for both
students and seasoned researchers.
This two-volume set takes an in-depth look at stress signaling in
plants from a uniquely genomic and proteomic perspective and offers
a comprehensive treatise that covers all of the signaling pathways
and mechanisms that have been researched so far. Currently, plant
diseases, extreme weather caused by climate change, drought and an
increase in metals in soil are amongst the major limiting factors
of crop production worldwide. They devastate not only the food
supply but also the economy of a nation. With global food scarcity
in mind, there is an urgent need to develop crop plants with
increased stress tolerance so as to meet the global food demands
and to preserve the quality of our planet. In order to do this, it
is necessary to understand how plants react and adapt to stress
from the genomic and proteomic perspective. Plants adapt to stress
conditions by activating cascades of molecular mechanisms, which
result in alterations in gene expression and synthesis of
protective proteins. From the perception of the stimulus to the
transduction of the signal, followed by an appropriate cellular
response, the plants employ a complex network of primary and
secondary messenger molecules. Cells exercise a large number of
noticeably distinct signaling pathways to regulate their activity.
In order to contend with different environmental adversities,
plants have developed a series of mechanisms at the physiological,
cellular and molecular levels that respond to stress. Each chapter
in this volume provides an in-depth explanation of what we
currently know of a particular aspect of stress signaling and where
we are heading. Together with the highly successful first volume,
Stress Signaling in Plants: Genomics and Proteomics Perspective,
Volume 2 covers an important aspect of plant biology for both
students and seasoned researchers.
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