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Roles of Organellar RNA-Binding Proteins in Plant Growth, Development, and Abiotic Stress Responses

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms21124548

Keywords

organellar gene expression; chloroplast; mitochondria; RNA metabolism; RNA-binding proteins; abiotic stress

Funding

  1. Humboldt Fellowship for Researchers
  2. Next-Generation BioGreen21 Program, Rural Development Administration, Republic of Korea [PJ01314701]

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Organellar gene expression (OGE) in chloroplasts and mitochondria is primarily modulated at post-transcriptional levels, including RNA processing, intron splicing, RNA stability, editing, and translational control. Nucleus-encoded Chloroplast or Mitochondrial RNA-Binding Proteins (nCMRBPs) are key regulatory factors that are crucial for the fine-tuned regulation of post-transcriptional RNA metabolism in organelles. Although the functional roles of nCMRBPs have been studied in plants, their cellular and physiological functions remain largely unknown. Nevertheless, existing studies that have characterized the functions of nCMRBP families, such as chloroplast ribosome maturation and splicing domain (CRM) proteins, pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR) proteins, DEAD-Box RNA helicase (DBRH) proteins, and S1-domain containing proteins (SDPs), have begun to shed light on the role of nCMRBPs in plant growth, development, and stress responses. Here, we review the latest research developments regarding the functional roles of organellar RBPs in RNA metabolism during growth, development, and abiotic stress responses in plants.

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