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Autophagy-Mediated Regulation of Different Meristems in Plants

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23116236

Keywords

autophagy; root meristem; stem meristem; plant stress; plant development

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32100297]

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Autophagy is a cell degradation process that regulates plant growth and development, as well as stress response. Recent studies have shown its association with meristem development, especially in shoot and root apical meristem.
Autophagy is a highly conserved cell degradation process that widely exists in eukaryotic cells. In plants, autophagy helps maintain cellular homeostasis by degrading and recovering intracellular substances through strict regulatory pathways, thus helping plants respond to a variety of developmental and environmental signals. Autophagy is involved in plant growth and development, including leaf starch degradation, senescence, anthers development, regulation of lipid metabolism, and maintenance of peroxisome mass. More and more studies have shown that autophagy plays a role in stress response and contributes to maintain plant survival. The meristem is the basis for the formation and development of new tissues and organs during the post-embryonic development of plants. The differentiation process of meristems is an extremely complex process, involving a large number of morphological and structural changes, environmental factors, endogenous hormones, and molecular regulatory mechanisms. Recent studies have demonstrated that autophagy relates to meristem development, affecting plant growth and development under stress conditions, especially in shoot and root apical meristem. Here, we provide an overview of the current knowledge about how autophagy regulates different meristems under different stress conditions and possibly provide new insights for future research.

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