Publications by authors named "Qian-Huan Guo"

Drought stress significantly impacts plant growth and productivity, requiring complex adaptive responses to ensure survival. In eukaryotes, autophagy and the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) are critical pathways for maintaining cellular homeostasis under stress. While their interaction is well-studied in animals, it remains poorly understood in plants, particularly under drought conditions.

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Article Synopsis
  • Plants can learn and remember past stresses, which helps them deal with new challenges better.
  • Researchers are studying how tiny RNA molecules play a role in this memory formation and stress response.
  • Understanding these processes can make crops stronger and help ensure there’s enough food for everyone.
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Article Synopsis
  • Increasing cuticular wax deposition in wheat is linked to improved drought tolerance, but how this process is regulated is still not fully understood.
  • A detailed analysis of two wheat lines revealed a significant interaction between lncRNA35557 and miRNA tae-miR6206, which helps regulate the drought-related transcription factor gene TaNAC018.
  • Manipulating the expression of TaNAC018 through various treatments and gene silencing techniques demonstrated its critical role in enhancing drought stress tolerance in wheat.
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MicroRNAs (miRNAs) play crucial roles in regulating plant development and stress responses. However, the functions and mechanism of intronic miRNAs in plants are poorly understood. This study reports a stress-responsive RNA splicing mechanism for intronic miR400 production, whereby miR400 modulates reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation and improves plant tolerance by downregulating its target expression.

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Plants overcome the changing environmental conditions through diverse strategies and complex regulations. In addition to direct regulation of gene transcription, alternative splicing (AS) also acts as a crucial regulatory mechanism to cope with various stresses. Generating from the same pre-mRNA, AS events allow rapid adjustment of the abundance and function of key stress-response components.

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Increasing evidence points to the tight relationship between alternative splicing (AS) and the salt stress response in plants. However, the mechanisms linking these two phenomena remain unclear. In this study, we have found that Salt-Responsive Alternatively Spliced gene 1 (SRAS1), encoding a RING-Type E3 ligase, generates two splicing variants: SRAS1.

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Whether photosynthesis has improved with increasing yield in major crops remains controversial. Research in this area has often neglected to account for differences in light intensity experienced by cultivars released in different years. Light intensity is expected to be positively associated with photosynthetic capacity and the resistance of the photosynthetic apparatus to high light but negatively associated with light-utilization efficiency under low light.

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MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have emerged as a class of regulators of gene expression through posttranscriptional degradation or translational repression in living cells. Increasing evidence points to the important relationship between miRNAs and environmental stress responses, but the regulatory mechanisms in plants are poorly understood. Here, we found that Arabidopsis thaliana intronic miR400 was cotranscribed with its host gene (At1g32583) and downregulated by heat treatment.

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