A plant's proteins play a crucial role in its survival and response to environmental challenges. The study of the protein population in a tissue, cell, or subcellular compartment is known as proteomics. A proteome is a collection of proteins produced by an organism's genome. Proteomics has become a critical tool for deciphering the molecular roles of biological processes.
For the refinement and characterisation of a phenotype, phenomics is the systematic measurement and study of qualitative and quantitative features, including clinical, biochemical, and imaging approaches. Phenomics is a method that allows for high-throughput, non-destructive phenotyping of crops in response to a variety of abiotic stressors.
Title : Exploring the genetic diversity in tannin-rich forages to explain the large intra species variability in tannin content
Selina Sterup Moore, Aarhus University, Denmark
Title : Isolation and functional properties of biomolecules of plants and its application
Balagopalan Unni, GEMS Arts & Science College (Autonomous), India
Title : Primed for the future: PGPR and the promise of sustainable, heritable crop resilience
Prashant Singh, Banaras Hindu University (BHU), India
Title : Revealing allelic variations in candidate genes associated with grain yield under salinity stress between two contrasting rice genotypes
Nisha Sulari Kottearachchi, Wayamba University of Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka
Title : Adaptive strategies of Aristida L. species across ecological zones of Pakistan: Linking soil characteristics with morphological and physiological traits
Iram Ijaz, University of Agriculture Faisalabad Pakistan, Pakistan
Title : Ethnobotanical survey and abundance of weeds in selected Manihot esculenta (cassava) Crantz farms in Osun state, Nigeria
Dada Caleb Mayokun, University of Ibadan, Nigeria