Prof. Baohong Zhang
Department of Biology, East Carolina University, Greenville, USA
Title: MicroRNA-regulated Mechanisms and it’s Application for Improving Crop Tolerance to Abiotic Stress
Abstract:
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are an extensive class of endogenous, small RNA molecules that sit at the heart of regulating gene expression in multiple developmental and signalling pathways. Recent studies have shown that abiotic stresses induce aberrant expression of many miRNAs, thus suggesting that miRNAs may be a new target for genetically improving plant tolerance to certain stresses. These studies have also shown that miRNAs respond to environmental stresses in a miRNA-, stress-, tissue-, and genotype-dependent manner. During abiotic stress, miRNAs function by regulating target genes within the miRNA-target gene network and by controlling signalling pathways and root development. Generally speaking, stress-induced miRNAs lead to down-regulation of negative regulators of stress tolerance whereas stress-inhibited miRNAs allow the accumulation and function of positive regulators. Currently, the majority of miRNA-based studies have focused on the identification of miRNAs that are responsive to different stress conditions and analysing their expression profile changes during these treatments. This has predominately been accomplished using deep sequencing technologies and other expression analyses, such as quantitative real-time PCR. In the future, more function and expression studies will be necessary in order to elucidate the common miRNA-mediated regulatory mechanisms that underlie tolerance to different abiotic stresses. The use of artificial miRNAs, as well as overexpression and knockout/down of both miRNAs and their targets, will be the best techniques for determining the specific roles of individual miRNAs in response to environmental stresses.
Biography:
Dr. Baohong Zhang is currently working as a distinguished professor at
East Carolina University (ECU, US). Dr. Zhang graduated from China Agricultural
University. After received his bachelor degree, he worked on cotton biotechnology
at Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences. Then he received his PhD from Texas
Tech University in 2006. Dr. Zhang has authored more than 200 publications with
more than 12,000 citations, many of them are listed as highly cited papers by
the Web of Sciences, his h-index is 49. Dr. Zhang frequently reviewed
manuscripts for many international journals, including Nature and Nature
Biotechnology. He also served as an Associate Editor or Guest Editor for 7
journals, including Scientific Reports and Plant Biotechnology Journal. He has reviewed proposals for more than 40 funding
agents, including NSF, US DoE, US USDA, and NSFC. Dr. Zhang is elected
to the Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science (AAAS) in 2018. He won the Researcher of the Year 2018 award
by the ICAC. In 2018, Dr. Zhang won the THCAS Distinguished Professorship and
the Highly Cited Scholar awards. Recently, he also won the Lifetime Research
Achievement Award, the top honor for ECU faculty.