Abstract

The domestication and improvement of many plant species have frequently involved modulation of transcriptional outputs and continue to offer much promise for targeted trait engineering. The cis-regulatory elements (CREs) controlling these trait-associated transcriptional variants however reside within non-coding regions that are currently poorly annotated in most plant species. This is particularly true in large crop genomes where regulatory regions constitute only a small fraction of the total genomic space. Furthermore, relatively little is known about how CREs function to modulate transcription in plants. Therefore understanding where regulatory regions are located within a genome, what genes they control, and how they are structured are important factors that could be used to guide both traditional and synthetic plant breeding efforts. Here, we describe classic examples of regulatory instances as well as recent advances in plant regulatory genomics. We highlight valuable molecular tools that are enabling large-scale identification of CREs and offering unprecedented insight into how genes are regulated in diverse plant species. We focus on chromatin environment, transcription factor (TF) binding, the role of transposable elements, and the association between regulatory regions and target genes.

Highlights

  • Frontiers in GeneticsThe domestication and improvement of many plant species have frequently involved modulation of transcriptional outputs and continue to offer much promise for targeted trait engineering

  • Reviewed by: Qi Li, Center for Excellence in Molecular Plant Sciences (CAS), China Yubing He, Nanjing Agricultural University, China

  • The cis-regulatory elements (CREs) controlling these trait-associated transcriptional variants reside within non-coding regions that are currently poorly annotated in most plant species

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Summary

Frontiers in Genetics

The domestication and improvement of many plant species have frequently involved modulation of transcriptional outputs and continue to offer much promise for targeted trait engineering. The cis-regulatory elements (CREs) controlling these trait-associated transcriptional variants reside within non-coding regions that are currently poorly annotated in most plant species. This is true in large crop genomes where regulatory regions constitute only a small fraction of the total genomic space. Understanding where regulatory regions are located within a genome, what genes they control, and how they are structured are important factors that could be used to guide both traditional and synthetic plant breeding efforts.

REGULATORY REGIONS AND MECHANISMS REVEALED BY CLASSIC STUDIES
Mapping Regulatory Determinants in Plants C
Findings
PROSPECTS FOR MINING REGULATORY DIVERSITY IN EXISTING GERMPLASM
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