4.6 Review

Epigenetic Mechanisms of Senescence in Plants

Journal

CELLS
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells11020251

Keywords

plant senescence; aging; epigenetic; DNA methylation; histone modification; chromatin remodeling; miRNA

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Senescence is a major developmental transition in plants that involves gene reprogramming and multilevel regulation. Transcription factors and epigenetic mechanisms play crucial roles in senescence-related genes, in addition to genetic reprogramming.
Senescence is a major developmental transition in plants that requires a massive reprogramming of gene expression and includes various layers of regulations. Senescence is either an age-dependent or a stress-induced process, and is under the control of complex regulatory networks that interact with each other. It has been shown that besides genetic reprogramming, which is an important aspect of plant senescence, transcription factors and higher-level mechanisms, such as epigenetic and small RNA-mediated regulators, are also key factors of senescence-related genes. Epigenetic mechanisms are an important layer of this multilevel regulatory system that change the activity of transcription factors (TFs) and play an important role in modulating the expression of senescence-related gene. They include chromatin remodeling, DNA methylation, histone modification, and the RNA-mediated control of transcription factors and genes. This review provides an overview of the known epigenetic regulation of plant senescence, which has mostly been studied in the form of leaf senescence, and it also covers what has been reported about whole-plant senescence.

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