Plant Abiotic Stress Tolerance VI (February 2020)

Welcome to the 6th International Conference on “Plant Abiotic Stress Tolerance”!

Abiotic stresses, defined as the negative impact of non-living factors on the living organisms in a specific environment are the primary causes of crop loss worldwide. Abiotic stresses include high and low temperatures, salinity, drought, flooding, heavy metal stress and many other environmental factors. Plant tolerance to these stresses is dependent on the molecular networks involved in stress perception, signaling, and the expression of specific stress-related genes and metabolites.

The 6th International Conference “Plant Abiotic Stress Tolerance” to be held on February 21-22, 2020, in Vienna, Austria will discuss the most recent advances in understanding and combating plant abiotic stress and tolerance mechanisms and to define new frontiers in this field.

This two-day event will provide leading academy and industry scientists a platform to communicate recent advances in “Plant Abiotic Stress Tolerance”, and an opportunity to establish multilateral collaboration.

The 6th International Conference on “Plant Abiotic Stress Tolerance” will cover the following research topics:

  • Plant Response to Heat Stress
  • Plant Response to Temperature & Drought
  • Plant Response to Salt & Osmotic Stress
  • Plant Response to Nutrient Stress & Heavy Metals
  • Plant Response to Oxidative- and Flooding Stress
  • Plant Abiotic Stress Signaling
  • Breeding & Engineering of Abiotic Stress Tolerance

Approximately 150 participants are expected to attend this exciting scientific forum including almost 30 lectures delivered by worldwide known invited speakers and young, talented speakers selected from submitted abstracts. The program combines plenary lectures, poster sessions, a unique Conference Dinner Party and sightseeing tours of Vienna.

Prof. Alisher Touraev (VISCEA, Austria, Local Organizer)

Eduardo Blumwald (USA)

Heribert Hirt (Saudi Arabia)

Martijn van Zanten (The Netherlands)

Sergey Shabala (Australia)

Mark Aarts (The Netherlands)

Kaisa Kajala (The Netherlands)

Michael Wrzaczek (Finland)

Claudia Jonak (Austria)

Teun Munnik (The Netherlands, Co-Organizer)

Eduardo Blumwald (USA)

Heribert Hirt (Saudi Arabia)

Martijn van Zanten (The Netherlands)

Sergey Shabala (Australia)

Mark Aarts (The Netherlands)

Kaisa Kajala (The Netherlands)

Michael Wrzaczek (Finland)

Claudia Jonak (Austria)

Teun Munnik (The Netherlands)

6th International Conference on “Plant Abiotic Stress Tolerance”

(February 21 – 22)

February 21 (Friday)
08.00 – 17.00 Registration
09.30 – 09.40 Opening
Welcome address by Alisher Touraev (Local Organizer, Austria)Welcome address by Teun Munnik (Conference Co-Chair, The Netherlands)
09.40 – 10.30 Keynote Lecture:

Eduardo Blumwald (USA): CHLOROPLAST VESICULATION Mediates Chloroplast and Peroxisome Turnover, Source-sink Relationships and Stress Tolerance in Crop Plants

10.30 – 11.00 Coffee break
11.00 – 12.30: Session I: Plant Response to Heat Stress
Chairs Eduardo Blumwald (USA) & Heribert Hirt (Saudi Arabia)
11.00 – 11.25 (+5) Heribert Hirt (Saudi Arabia): Microbiome-induced Epigenetic Mechanism of Heat Stress Tolerance in Plants
11.30 – 11.45 (+5) Sylva Prerostova (Czech Republic): Heat Acclimation and Inhibited Cytokinin Degradation positively Affect Heat Stress Tolerance of Arabidopsis
11.50 – 12.05 (+5) Guido Domingo (Italy): Heat Stress Response in Tobacco BY-2 Cells impaired in cAMP Content
12.10 – 12.25 (+5) Sona Pandey (USA): Modulation of Heat Stress Response by Heterotrimeric G Proteins in Arabidopsis
12.30 – 14.00 Lunch + Poster Session (all numbers), Conference Photo
14.00 – 15.35 Session II: Plant Response to Temperature & Drought
Chairs Martijn van Zanten (The Netherlands) & Sergey Shabala (Australia)
14.00 – 14.25 (+5) Martijn van Zanten (The Netherlands): Thermomorphogenesis Control by Histone Deacetylase 9; Optimal Plant Performance under Suboptimal Temperature Conditions
14.30 – 14.50 (+5) László Szabados (Hungary): Small paraquat Resistance Proteins (SPQ) modulate paraquat, ABA and Drought Responses in Arabidopsis
14.55 – 15.10 (+5) Katarzyna Lechowicz (Poland): Insight into Mechanisms of Drought Resistance in Lolium multiflorum/Festuca arundinacea Introgression Forms
15.15 – 15.30 (+5) Liudmyla Kozeko (Ukraine): Kinetics of HSP70 and HSP90 Expression and Drought Tolerance of Arabidopsis thaliana
15.35 – 16.00 Coffee break
16.00 – 17.35 Session III: Plant Response to Salt & Osmotic Stress
Chairs Sergey Shabala (Australia), Martijn van Zanten (The Netherlands)
16.00 – 16.25 (+5) Sergey Shabala (Australia): Strategies and Cost of Plant Osmotic Adjustment
16.30 – 16.45 (+5) Femke de Jong (The Netherlands): Identification of PIP2-interacting Proteins in Response to Salt- and Heat Stress
16.50 – 17.00 (+5) Simone Cantamessa (Italy): An Endophytic Bacterium improves Salt Stress Tolerance in Tomato Plants
17.05 – 17.15 (+5) Zoltan Takacs (Austria): Hot water Treatment modifies Redox Status and Phytohormone Synthesis in Apple Fruit during short-term Storage
17.20 – 17.30 (+5) Chwan-Yang Hong (Taiwan): Molecular Characterization and Subcellular Localization of Salt-inducible Lipid Transfer Proteins in Rice
17.35 – 19.00 Welcome Reception + Poster Session (all numbers)
19.00 – 22.00 Conference Dinner Party
Traditional Austrian food and wine, located in one of Vienna’s famous ‘Heurigen’  Cost: 50,- EUR
 

 

 

February 22 (Saturday)

08.00 – 17.00 Registration
09.00 – 10.35 Session IV: Plant Response to Nutrient Stress & Heavy Metals
Chairs Mark Aarts (The Netherlands) & Michael Wrzaczek (Finland)
09.00 – 09.25 (+5) Mark Aarts (The Netherlands): Exploring the Genetics Underlying Arabidopsis Zn Deficiency Response
09.30 – 09.50 (+5) Gabor Feigl (Hungary): Alyssum lesbiacum Populations from Distinct Habitat show Different Nitro-Oxidative Response to Nickel Stress
09.55 – 10.10 (+5) Manon Sarthou (France): Identification of Uranium Root Absorption Pathways in Arabidopsis thaliana
10.15 – 10.30 (+5) Julian Preiner (Austria): Increased levels of phenolic compounds, polyamines and amino acids indicate potential symbiont induced reduction of tungsten (W) induced stress in glycine max
10.35 – 11.00 Coffee break
11.00 – 12.35 Session V: Plant Response to Oxidative- and Flooding Stress
Chairs Kaisa Kajala (The Netherlands) & Michael Wrzaczek (Finland)
11.00 – 11.20 (+5) Kaisa Kajala (The Netherlands): Evolutionary Flexibility in Flooding Response Circuitry in Angiosperms
11.25 – 11.45 (+5) Michael Wrzaczek (Finland): CRK2 is involved in the Control of Salt Stress-Induced Callose Deposition
11.50 – 12.10 (+5) Julia Krasensky-Wrzaczek (Finland): Regulation of Stress Tolerance under Different Light Conditions
12.15 – 12.30 (+5) Chhandak Basu (USA): Engineering Ethylene Biosynthetic Pathway leads to Flood Tolerance in Plants
12.35 – 14.00 Lunch + Poster Session (all numbers)
14.00 – 15.30 Session VI: Plant Abiotic Stress Signaling
Chairs Teun Munnik (The Netherlands) & Claudia Jonak (Austria)
14.00 – 14.25 (+5) Teun Munnik (The Netherlands):  Abiotic-Stress Induced Lipid Signaling
14.30 – 14.55 (+5) Claudia Jonak (Austria): Linking Salt Stress Signaling to the Chromatin
15.00 – 15.10 (+5) Mohan Sharma (India): Glucose-TOR Signaling Controls Thermotolerance/Thermomemory
15.15 – 15.25 (+5) Bruna Junqueira (Belgium): Unraveling the Role of the enigmatic Zea mays PIP1;1 aquaporin
15.30 – 16.00 Coffee Break
16.00 – 17.30 Session VII: Breeding & Engineering of Abiotic Stress Tolerance
Chairs Claudia Jonak (Austria) & Vibha Srivastava (USA)
16.00 – 16.25 (+5) Vibha Srivastava (USA): Modulation of ERECTA for Improving Stress tolerance in Rice
16.30 – 16.45 (+5) Inês Leitão (Portugal): Effects on antioxidant Defense Mechanisms of Lettuce Plants Exposed to Contamination by Acetaminophen and Carbamazepine
16.50 – 17.05 (+5) Michal Lieberman-Lazarovich (Israel): Pollen flavonols in a Tomato high-pigment Mutant grown under Heat Stress Conditions
17.10 – 17.25 (+5) Tom Rankenberg (The Netherlands): Dying to Survive: Molecular Regulation of Senescence during Submergence and Recovery in Arabidopsis
17.30 – 17.45 (+5) Galina Shevchenko (Ukraine): Changes of Protein Expression in A. thaliana from Chernobyl Zone
17.50 – 18.00 Closing Ceremony

PlantAbioticAbstractBook