About this Research Topic
While the question of the links between lipids and intracellular trafficking is of very broad relevance to any eukaryotic cells, this Research Topic focuses on their roles in plants. Plant membranes share many characteristics with other eukaryotes, nonetheless they have singular features, including the presence of unique lipids (e.g. phytosterol, GIPC, galactolipids) and a drastically different endomembrane system (e.g. presence of chloroplasts, several vacuoles, a unique compartment that serves as trans-Golgi Network (TGN) and early endosome).
In this Research Topic, we will notably focus on the following questions:
• How are lipid patterns in the cell achieved, both at the “macro” scale (i.e. between different membrane compartments or pole of the cell) and “nano” scale (segregation of lipids in domains within a single membrane)? And what are the contributions of intracellular trafficking and lipid exchange at MCSs between organelles in the establishment of these patterns?
• How membrane physicochemical properties participate in membrane trafficking and cell signaling?
• How lipids contribute to the recruitment and function of trafficking complexes, cytoskeleton components and tethering element at contact sites?
• To what extend does the coupling between lipid homeostasis and trafficking contribute to plant development, environmental adaptation (including response to biotic and abiotic stresses) and reproduction?
• How lipid-mediated trafficking mechanisms have diversified with the appearance of multicellular organisms during plant evolution?
We welcome interested researchers that would like to contribute to this Research Topic in a wide variety of formats including Original Research Articles, Opinion Articles or Review Articles.
Keywords: Lipid, Vesicular Trafficking, Development, Cell Polarity, Environmental Interactions
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.