About this Research Topic
The nature of uptake, intracellular transport mechanisms, the distribution of metals in incorporated versus labile pools, the regulation of the homeostasis, and the interactions with essential and non-essential metals remain key questions in algae and land plants. Since land plants are multicellular organisms where the cellular transition metal homeostasis is overlaid with the organism-level regulatory processes, the understanding of cellular metal housekeeping remains a challenge. In this light, transition metal homeostasis of algal cells that lack tissue organisation represents an important keystone in the knowledge of intracellular regulation.
This Research Topic will bring together the latest advances in the cellular transition metal homeostasis in photosynthetic organisms such as land plants and algae. The topic also covers aspects of the interactions of essential transition metals with non-essential elements and stressors that also affect the redox balance in cells in a comprehensive way.
The Research Topic includes contributions of all article types in the aspects of:
• Origins of cellular metal homeostasis in land plants and conservation of functions over deep phylogenetic distances
• Molecular basis of transition metal sensing and distribution
• Regulatory networks that govern intracellular metal homeostasis
• Transition metal homeostasis of the apoplast
• Molecular mechanisms of transmembrane transition metal loading and delivery into cell organelles
• Pathways and mechanisms of transition metal liberation from organelles and cellular metal recycling
• Influence of transition metal homeostasis on developmental and physiological processes, such as autophagy and cell death
• Interactions of essential transitions metals to other elements
• Stress conditions that affect cellular transition metal homeostasis
Keywords: transition metal, homeostasis, metal homeostasis, intercellular, algae, photosynthetic organisms
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.