The 34th International Conference on Arabidopsis Research (ICAR 2024) PDF Free Download

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The 34th International Conference on Arabidopsis Research (ICAR 2024) PDF Free Download

The 34th International Conference on Arabidopsis Research (ICAR 2024) PDF free Download. Think more deeply and widely.

ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 1ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 1 25/06/2024 22:4925/06/2024 22:49
#ICAR2025
International Conference
on Arabidopsis Research
ICAR2025
Ghent, Belgium
June 16th-20th 2025
http://www.icar2025.com/
Keynote Speakers
Paula Casati
Jiri Friml
Jane Parker
Hosted at De Bijloke
6 Plenary Sessions
20+ Concurrents/Workshops
2x Poster Sessions
Social at Viernulvier Concertzall
WinRHIZO
Four Versions
WinRHIZO
Tro n • Two Versions
Software Programs for Interactive
Analysis of Images of Roots in Soil
and Rhizotron
•Tron & Tron MF
Trace roots manually with a mouse or a pen
that works with a Windows tablet or hybrid
laptop computer.
Monitor root growth by analysing Multiple
Frames (images) of a root system taken at
dierent times.
Root morphology in function of root
diameter and color: length,area,
volume and number of tips
Topology and developmental analysis
Data retrievable from le names using
the ICAP naming scheme
Previous analysis can be retrieved to
resume analysis of the same location at
a later time simply by adding new or
dead roots since the last analysis.
Automatic Analysis Systems
for Washed Roots
Basic, Regular & Pro
Scan washed roots with our
scanners and accessories.
Root morphology in function of
root diameter and color: length,
area, volume and number of tips
Number of forks and crossings
Root overlap detection for
accurate measurement
Topology, link and architecture
with fractals
Developmental classication
•• Available measurements and
features vary according to
WinRHIZO’s version.
See analysis results summarized
on screen after scanning.
Surface area and automatic
count of non-touching nodules
•• Also includes all measurements
and features of WinRHIZO Pro.
Leaf area of seedlings in Petri dish
Germination Count
Leaf area - leaf/hypocotyl distinction
Root morphology
Topology and developmental
analysis
Arabidopsis
Automatic Analysis System for
Washed Roots and Seedlings
grown in Petri Dish
Analyse seedlings and leaves:
Globally Individually
Leaf area, length and width of plant
in soil
Image Analysis Tools for Roots and Seedlings
We oer eight software product families for research on plants and trees.
Visit our website or Contact us for details!
www.regentinstruments.com sales@regentinstruments.com
33
WinRHIZO
Four Versions
WinRHIZO
Tro n Two Versions
Software Programs for Interactive
Analysis of Images of Roots in Soil
and Rhizotron
Tron & Tron MF
Trace roots manually with a mouse or a pen
that works with a Windows tablet or hybrid
laptop computer.
Monitor root growth by analysing Multiple
Frames (images) of a root system taken at
dierent times.
Root morphology in function of root
diameter and color: length,area,
volume and number of tips
Topology and developmental analysis
Data retrievable from le names using
the ICAP naming scheme
Previous analysis can be retrieved to
resume analysis of the same location at
a later time simply by adding new or
dead roots since the last analysis.
Automatic Analysis Systems
for Washed Roots
Basic, Regular & Pro
Scan washed roots with our
scanners and accessories.
Root morphology in function of
root diameter and color: length,
area, volume and number of tips
Number of forks and crossings
Root overlap detection for
accurate measurement
Topology, link and architecture
with fractals
Developmental classication
•• Available measurements and
features vary according to
WinRHIZO’s version.
See analysis results summarized
on screen after scanning.
Surface area and automatic
count of non-touching nodules
•• Also includes all measurements
and features of WinRHIZO Pro.
Leaf area of seedlings in Petri dish
Germination Count
Leaf area - leaf/hypocotyl distinction
Root morphology
Topology and developmental
analysis
Arabidopsis
Automatic Analysis System for
Washed Roots and Seedlings
grown in Petri Dish
Analyse seedlings and leaves:
Globally Individually
Leaf area, length and width of plant
in soil
Image Analysis Tools for Roots and Seedlings
We oer eight software product families for research on plants and trees.
Visit our website or Contact us for details!
www.regentinstruments.com sales@regentinstruments.com
The 34th International Conference on
Arabidopsis Research (ICAR 2024)
15-19 July 2024
The University of California, San Diego, USA
Arabidopsis as a Nexus for Discovery,
Innovation, Application, and Impact
Organized by the North American Arabidopsis
Steering Committee (NAASC)
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ICAR 2024 Organizing Committee
Lead Organizer: Joanna Friesner, NAASC
Organizing Committee (NAASC)
Federica Brandizzi, Michigan State University, USA
Anna Stepanova, North Carolina State University, USA
R. Keith Slotkin, Donald Danforth Plant Science Center
& University of Missouri, USA
Cris Argueso, Colorado State University, USA
Adrienne Roeder, Cornell University, USA
Dior Kelley, Iowa State University, USA
Gloria Muday, Wake Forest University, USA
Mentewab Ayalew, Spelman College, USA
Liang Song, University of British Columbia, Canada
Mary Gehring, Whitehead Institute, MIT, USA
Sharon Kessler, Purdue University, USA
Zach Nimchuk, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA
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Table of Contents
ICAR 2024 Sponsors 1
ICAR 2024 Exhibitors 2
Program Overview 3
Special Community Sessions 6
Campus Information 7
Detailed Program 8
Monday 15th July 8
Tuesday 16th July 9
Wednesday 17th July 14
Thursday 18th July 19
Friday 19th July 24
List of Posters 26
Acknowledgements and Gratitude 33
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Notes
ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 6ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 6 01/07/2024 10:0601/07/2024 10:06
ICAR 2024 Sponsors
Conference Dinner Gold Sponsor
Major Participant
Support Funding
Silver Sponsors
Bronze Sponsors
ICAR 2024 Organizing Committee
Sponsor for Closing Keynote
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1
ICAR 2024 Exhbitors
Additional Conference Sponsors
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2
Program Overview
MONDAY, JULY 15, 2024
12:30-8:30 Registration Plaza, Outside Price Center, Level 1
2:00-7:00 Exhibitors can set-up booths (or on Tuesday). First Exhibit session is Tuesday: 5-9:30 pm
East Ballroom, Price Center, Level 2
2:00-7:00 Posters may be hung (or on Tuesday). First Poster session is Tuesday: 5-9:30 pm. East Ballroom
& Roosevelt College Room, Price Center, Level 2
1:00-2:00 Exploring Career Opportunities in Academia & Industry Panel The Forum, Price Center, Level 4
2:15-3:20 C1: From Arabidopsis to Crops: Unveiling the Secrets of Elemental Nutrient Uptake, Allocation,
andBioforticationTheForum,PriceCenter,Level4
4:00-6:30 Coffee/Tea at Registration Tables Plaza, Outside Price Center, Level 1
4:30-5:30 A tribute to Philip Benfey: Networks facilitate the development of roots and scientists
West Ballroom, Price Center, Level 2
6:00-8:00 OfcialICAR2024Open/Welcome,P1:Keynotes(KeikoSugimoto&DolfWeijers)&NAASC
Awards (Terri Long & Beronda Montgomery) West Ballroom, Price Center, Level 2
8:00-9:30 ICAR 2024 Welcome Reception Shores Diner (Adjacent to Price Center)
TUESDAY, JULY 16, 2024
8:00-11:30 Registration Plaza, Outside Price Center, Level 1
8:00-onward Posters&ExhibitBoothsmaybesetup(rstsession:today,5-9:30pm)
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room, Price Center, Level 2
8:00-9:30 ArtShowsetupforartistparticipants(rstshow:today,5-9:30PM)
Bear Room, Price Center Level 2
9:00-10:30 P2: Development, Stress, Plasticity West Ballroom, Price Center, Level 2
10:30-11:00 Coffee/TeaPlaza, Outside Price Center, Level 1
11 -12:30 P3: Sustainable Crops/Food/Bioproducts, Improving Photosynthesis
West Ballroom, Price Center, Level 2
12:30-1:30 Lunch (outside) Matthews Quad (adjacent to Price Center)
1:45-3:15 C2: Epigenetics The Theater, Price Center , Level 1
1:45-3:15 C3: Molecular Mechanisms of Hormone Function West Ballroom A, Price Center, Level 2
1:45-3:15 C4:EnvironmentalandTissue-SpecicRegulationofPlantCircadianRhythms
West Ballroom B, Price Center, Level 2
1:45-3:15 C5:Cell-typeSpecicResponsesforPlantResiliencetoStressTheForum,PriceCenter,Level4
3:15-3:45 Coffee/Tea Plaza, Theater Lobby, Forum Patio
3:45-5:15 C6: A Systems Approach to Decipher Plant Cell Wall Dynamics The Theater, Price Center, Level 1
3:45-5:15 C7: Light and Warm Temperature Crosstalk in Plants West Ballroom A, Price Center, Level 2
3:45-5:15 C8: Pushing the Boundaries of Single cell omics Technologies and Applications West Ballroom B,
Price Center, Level 2
3:45-5:15 C9: Robustness and Resilience: Surviving a Changing Climate The Forum, Price Center, Level 4
4:00-5:00 Art Show set up for artist participants Bear Room, Price Center Level 2
5:00-9:30 Poster Session 1 & Exhibit Hall Reception East Ballroom, Price Center Level 2
5:00-9:30 Science Art Show open for browsing Bear Room, Price Center Level 2
5:30-6:30 C10: Tiny Pores With Global Impact The Theater, Price Center , Level 1
5:30-6:30 C11: Charting the Course and Weathering Storms: Organizational Practices and Individual
Actions that Support Scientists as they Navigate Career Transitions
West Ballroom B, Price Center, Level 2
5:30-6:30 C12: Genomic Features and Mechanisms of MutationWest Ballroom A, Price Center, Level 2
5:30-6:30 C13: Chemical Genetics in Arabidopsis Research: Recent Advances and Applications
The Forum, Price Center, Level 4
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6:30-9:00 Meet the Editors’ Table: Root & Shoot (6:30-7) The Plant Cell (7-7:30) The Plant Journal (7:30-
8) Plant Phys (8-8:30) New Phytologist (8:30-9)East Ballroom, Price Center Level 2
7:00-8:00 Poster Session 1: Even # posters (presenters of even # posters: stand by your poster)
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room, Price Center, Level 2
8:00-9:00 Poster Session 1: Odd # posters (presenters of odd # posters: stand by your poster)
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room, Price Center, Level 2
9.30 Doors Close East Ballroom, Roosevelt College Room and Bear Room, Price Center, Level 2
WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 2024
6:50-8:00 (optional activity, free) “Weed Stampede” 5K Fun Run/Walk (must sign liability waiver before
participating) Triton Fountain, South side outside Plaza, across from Matthews Quad lunch site
8:00-11:30 Registration Plaza, Outside Price Center, Level 1
9:00-10:30 P4: Epigenetics, small RNAs West Ballroom, Price Center, Level 2
10:30-11:00 Coffee/TeaPlaza, Outside Price Center, Level 1
11:00 -12:30 P5: Reproduction, Regeneration, Cell Identity West Ballroom, Price Center, Level 2
12:30-1:30 Lunch (outside) Matthews Quad (adjacent to Price Center)
1:45-3:15 C14: Epigenome and Epitranscriptome in Environmental Stress Signaling and Memory
The Theater, Price Center , Level 1
1:45-3:15 C15: Cell Fate Control and Organogenesis: Towards Understanding and Imaging Complex
Tissues West Ballroom A, Price Center, Level 2
1:45-3:15 C16: More than Growth: Plant Development in Plant-Biotic Interactions
West Ballroom B, Price Center, Level 2
1:45-3:15 C17: Adaptations to Extreme Climate in Arabidopsis Extremophyte Relatives
The Forum, Price Center, Level 4
3:15-3:45 Coffee/TeaPlaza, Theater Lobby, Forum Patio
3:45-5:15 C18: Dynamic Plant Cells: Organelle Dynamics and Cell Division During Development
The Theater, Price Center , Level 1
3:45-5:15 C19: Chromatin at Single-cell and Single Molecule Resolution
West Ballroom A, Price Center, Level 2
3:45-5:15 C20: Deciphering the Secrets of Microbiomes in Promoting Stress Resilience in Plants – a
Strategy for Achieving Agricultural Sustainability West Ballroom B, Price Center, Level 2
3:45-5:15 C21: Synthesis and Function of Plant Specialized Metabolites that Regulate Development and
Stress Responses The Forum, Price Center, Level 4
5:00-9:30 Poster Session 2 & Exhibit Hall Reception East Ballroom, Price Center Level 2
5:00-9:30 Science Art Show open for browsing Bear Room, Price Center Level 2
5:30-6:30 C22: Evolutionary Plant Systems Biology for Climate Adaptation
The Theater, Price Center, Level 1
5:30-6:30 C23: Our Community Effort to Reannotate the Arabidopsis Genome
West Ballroom A, Price Center, Level 2
5:30-6:30 C24: Mobile DNA and Genome Plasticity West Ballroom B, Price Center, Level 2
5:30-6:30 C25: New Methods to Accelerate Plant Synthetic Biology The Forum, Price Center, Level 4
6:30-9:00 Meet the Editors’ Table: Development J (6:30-7) The Plant Cell (7-7:30) The Plant
Journal (7:30-8) Plant Phys (8-8:30) New Phytologist (8:30-9)
East Ballroom, Price Center Level 2
7:00-8:00 Poster Session 2: Odd # posters (presenters of odd # posters: stand by your poster)
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room, Price Center, Level 2
8:00-9:00 Poster Session 2: Even # posters (presenters of even # posters: stand by your poster)
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room, Price Center, Level 2
9:00 Posters & Art may be removed (or Thursday morning: 7:30-9:00 AM)
East Ballroom, Roosevelt College Room and Bear Room, Price Center, Level 2
9:30 Doors Close East Ballroom, Roosevelt College Room and Bear Room, Price Center, Level 2
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THURSDAY, JULY 18, 2024
7:30-9:00 Posters & Art Show- Final breakdown/removal. Posters & Art must be removed by 9:00 AM or
will be discarded East Ballroom & Bear Room, Price Center Level 2
8:00-11:30 Registration Plaza, Outside Price Center, Level 1
9:00-10:30 P6: Adaptation & Engineering for Environmental Stress Response
West Ballroom, Price Center, Level 2
10:30-11:00 Town Hall West Ballroom, Price Center, Level 2
11-11:30 Coffee/TeaPlaza, Outside Price Center, Level 1
11:30 -1 C26: The Roles of Biomolecular Condensates and Their Interactions with The Membrane System
The Theater, Price Center , Level 1
11:30 -1 C27: From Perception to Memory: How Plants Adapt to Climate Change
West Ballroom A, Price Center, Level 2
11:30-1 C28:HormonalInuenceonPlantFormWestBallroomB,PriceCenter,Level2
11:30 -1 C29: Phenotypic Plasticity in Arabidopsis thaliana - Mechanisms and Evolution
The Forum, Price Center, Level 4
1:00-2:00 Lunch (outside) Matthews Quad (adjacent to Price Center)
2:00-3:30 C30: Translational Research from Arabidopsis to Crop Plants and Beyond
The Theater, Price Center , Level 1
2:00-3:30 C31: Long-distance Signaling in Times of StressWest Ballroom A, Price Center, Level 2
2:00-3:30 C32:RNAModicationsandTheirRoleinPlantsWestBallroomB,PriceCenter,Level2
2:00-3:30 C33: Seed Biology: Development, Germination and Dormancy The Forum, Price Center, Level 4
3:45-5:15 C34: Visualizing the Dynamics of Cell Biology During Plant Development and Environmental
Stresses The Theater, Price Center , Level 1
3:45-5:15 C35: Quantitative Proteomics Applications to Dissect Signal Transduction in Arabidopsis
West Ballroom A, Price Center, Level 2
3:45-5:15 C36: Stress Combination: A New Frontier in Plant Sciences
West Ballroom B, Price Center, Level 2
3:45-5:15 C37: Arabidopsis Beyond Arabidopsis - Towards Generalisable Principles in Biology
The Forum, Price Center, Level 4
6:00-9:00 Dinner Party hosted by the Salk Institute for Biological Sciences (ticketed event, pre-purchase
required) The Salk Institute
FRIDAY, JULY 19, 2024
8:00- 3:00PM Luggage Hold West Green Room, Price Center, Level 2
9:00-11:00 P7: Plant/Microbe Interactions, Immunity, Disease Resistance & NAASC Awards (Molly Edwards
& Alison Crowe) West Ballroom, Price Center, Level 2
11-11:30 Coffee/TeaPlaza, Outside Price Center, Level 1
11:30 -1 P8: Keynotes Seung Yon (Sue) Rhee & José Dinney & NAASC Awards (Román Ramos Baez &
Imani Madison) West Ballroom, Price Center, Level 2
1:00-2:00 P9: Inaugural NAASC Arabidopsis Community Lifetime Achievement Awards Panel (Joanne
Chory, Jeff Dangl, Joe Ecker, Elliot Meyerowitz, Chris Somerville) West Ballroom, Price Center,
Level 2
2:00-2:15 AnnouncementofICAR2025andOfcialCloseofICAR2024
West Ballroom, Price Center, Level 2
2.15- 3:00 Boxed Lunches to take with you West Ballroom Foyer, Price Center, Level 2
We hope you had a successful ICAR 2024, we wish you safe travels, and
hope to see you in Ghent, Belgium at ICAR 2025!
Mark your calendars for June 16-20, 2025.
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Special Community Sessions
Monday 15 July: 1-2 pm, The Forum, Level 4, Price Center
Panel: Exploring Career Opportunities in Academia & Industry
Chairs: The NAASC Early Career Scholars Subcommittee (ECSS). Moderators: Dior Kelley, Iowa State University and
NAASC, Mingyuan Zhu, Duke University and ECSS, and Xiaohui Li, Purdue University and ECSS
The NAASC Early Career Scholars Subcommittee (ECSS) is hosting this workshop which features a number of
panelistsfromindustry,academia,andnon-protsectorswhowilldiscussvariouscareerpathsavailabletotrainees.
This is a great opportunity to learn more about how to prepare for different career paths and make an informed
decision about future career choices.
Monday 15 July: 4:30-5:30 pm,
West Ballroom, Level 2, Price Center
A Tribute to Philip Benfey: Networks Facilitate the
Development of Roots and Scientists
Organized by Wolfgang Busch, Salk Institute, and Rachel Shahan, UCLA
In this memorial session, we will honor the life and work of Philip
Benfey, who passed away on September 26, 2023. Philip, a noted plant
developmental biologist, was an extraordinary colleague, an inspiring
mentor, a visionary scientist, and an innovative entrepreneur. We will
celebrate his far-reaching contributions to plant biology and the indelible
mark he leaves on our community. The session includes talks by four
colleagues and additional short tributes by former trainees.
Tuesday 16 July: 5:30-6:30 pm, West Ballroom B, Level 2, Price Center
Panel: Charting the Course and Weathering Storms: Organizational Practices and Individual
Actions that Support Scientists as they Navigate Career Transitions
Chairs: Mary Williams, ASPB, Mentewab Ayalew, Spelman College and NAASC
Career transitions are key points at which scientists, particularly those with marginalized racial, ethnic, gender
or other identities, can stumble. A career in science can and should have many intersecting paths, rather than a
single hegemonistic pipeline. In this workshop we will provide a set of short presentations about practices that can
effectively help people bridge career transitions and persist in science, highlighting organizational practices and
individual actions. Discussion of organizational best practices will range from the assessment of candidates and
faculty progress towards tenure, to fostering a culture of belonging, and the wider role of professional societies.
Discussion on individual action will range from securing independent funding and getting grants, exploring academic
andindustryjobs,personaladvocacyandndingacommunity.
Wednesday 17 July: 5:30-6:30 pm, West Ballroom A, Level 2, Price Center
Our Community Effort to Reannotate the Arabidopsis Genome
Chairs: Tanya Berardini, Phoenix Bionformatics, Nicholas Provart, University of Toronto, Cell & Systems Biology
The workshop will feature participants from the various groups that came together to create an updated A. thaliana
Col-0referencegenome.ThisversionistherstsinceAraport11,whichwasreleasedinJune2016.Whereas
all previous versions had dedicated funding, v12 combines the efforts and strengths of independent labs across
the world to create a resource for the good of the community. The workshop speakers will cover the brand-new
community consensus (Col-CC) assembly including the NOR2 and NOR4 sequences, the manual review of the
automated annotation pipeline, the new and vastly improved independent annotations of sets of transposable
elements and lncRNAs, and some examples of how the new reannotation has enabled previously inaccessible
insights into the A. thaliana genome. We think this workshop will be appealing to all ICAR attendees because of the
wide-ranging impact of the new release on all of plant biology.
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Campus Information- Printing Posters,
Coffee and Dining
Please check this link for updated summer campus dining hours and locations.
https://blink.ucsd.edu/facilities/services/general/personal/dining.html
Campus Coffee (there may be more but summer hours are not yet known)
Starbucks adjacent to Price Center (may be closed on the weekend during summer)
Art of Espresso, Mandeville Center (open 8 am - 4 pm Monday-Friday). 8’ walk from campus lodging, 4’
walk from Price Center.
Sixth Market (described below also)- full coffee & espresso bar and more. Adjacent to campus lodging
On-campus dining (summer hours not posted, may be only open on weekdays)
Adjacent to campus lodging: Sixth Market is the largest market on campus, featuring groceries, fresh
produce, snacks, grab and go meals, health and beauty options, as well as a full coffee and espresso bar.
Price Center (ICAR location) has a number of fast-food options as well as the adjacent Dirty Birds Bar &
Grill (10’ walk from campus lodging. Closed on weekends). Beer, fries, chicken wings, onion rings, pizza by the
slice, burgers, salads. See: https://www.dirtybirdsbarandgrill.com/quick-menu
Campus shopping: Target store on Level 2 of Price Center West, with a CVS pharmacy.
Print Your Poster:
Poster size- portrait layout: 36” wide x 48” tall maximum (can be smaller)
Gilman Service Center at the Gilman Parking Structure (~ a 5–10-minute walk from Price Center).
Hours: 9 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. weekdays (Monday -Friday). Two print options: in-advance or onsite printing. (1)
In advance: email your print-ready PDF at least 3 days before you travel to ICAR (or 11 July, whichever date
is earlier) to tritonprint@ucsd.edu and it will be printed in 1 business day. In your email you must specify the
nalprintsize(2)Onsite:Bringyourprint-readyposterPDFleonaashdrivetotheirofce(hourslisted
above). This takes 15-20 minutes to print. Cost for either option: ~$60 USD plus tax (estimate ~$65 USD
total). Payment types accepted: Cash, Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, DinersClub.
ScanTech Graphics is an off-campus store 7 miles away from campus (you would need to provide trans-
portation to/from.) ScanTech poster print cost: $42 (with 2-3 days advanced ordering) $63 USD (same day,
orderbefore2pm),plustax.https://store.scantechgraphics.com/product/scientic-poster-matte-bond
Dining at off-campus, at nearby restaurants. Bus or trolley ride recommended.
1-WesteldUTC,largeshoppingmallwith~70restaurants.Shorttrolleyride(3stops,towardsUTC)or30’
bus ride (address: 4545 La Jolla Village Dr Ste E-25, San Diego). Fare for trolley or bus: $2.50/way.
2- The Shops at La Jolla Village: shopping mall with many restaurants (and Whole Foods market): Short trolley
ride (2 stops towards San Ysidro) to Nobel Drive. Or city metro transit buses that run along Gilman Drive (201,
30, and 101) that might be more convenient if you are staying in Sixth College lodging. (Address: 8801-8879
Villa La Jolla Dr, La Jolla). The bus stops are about a 10-minute walk from Sixth, and the bus ride is ~ 20 min-
utes to Nobel Drive. Fare for trolley or bus: $2.50/way.
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12:30-8:30 Registration
Plaza, Outside Price Center, Level 1
2:00-7:00 Exhibitors can set-up booths (or on Tuesday). First Exhibit session is Tuesday: 5-9:30 pm
East Ballroom, Price Center, Level 2
2:00-7:00 Posters may be hung (or on Tuesday). First Poster session is Tuesday: 5-9:30 pm.
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room, Price Center, Level 2
1:00-2:00 Exploring Career Opportunities in Academia & Industry Panel
The Forum (Price Center, Level 4)
Session chairs: NAASC Early Career Scholars Subcommittee (ECSS) members Dior Kelley,
Iowa State University; Mingyuan Zhu, Duke University, and Xiaohui Li, Purdue University
Brian Crawford: Trait Genetics Strategy Lead, Pairwise Plants
Ying Sun: Chief of Staff, Oath, Inc
Jingjing Liu: Scientist, PacBio
TanyaBerardini:ChiefScienticOfcer,PhoenixBioinformatics
Margot Smit: Junior Group Leader, Center for Plant Molecular Biology (ZMBP), Tübengen University
Arif Ashraf: Assistant Professor, Howard University
Yanhai Yin: Professor, Iowa State University
2:15-3:20 C1: From Arabidopsis to Crops: Unveiling the Secrets of
ElementalNutrientUptake,Allocation,andBiofortication
The Forum (Price Center, Level 4)
Session chairs: Pedro Humberto Castro, BIOPOLIS-CIBIO, University of Porto; Christian Dubos, Institut for
Plant Sciences of Montpellier (IPSiM); Nijat Imin, Western Sydney University
2:15-2:20 Introduction Pedro Humberto Castro, University of Porto, PORTUGAL
2:20-2:35 C1-1 Unravelling the peptide-receptor pathways that orchestrate nitrogen uptake, utilisation, and root
development Nijat Imin, University of Auckland, NEW ZEALAND
2:35-2:50 C1-2 Study of vacuole glycerate transporter NPF84 reveals a new role of photorespiration in C/N balance
Yi-Chen Lin, Fu Jen Catholic University, TAIWAN
2:50-3:05 C1-3 Feeding plants phosphorus one cell at a time Imani Madison,North Carolina State University, USA
3:05-3:20 C1-4 AMF transporters are important for cellular ammonium management and nitrogen delivery to
developing seeds Brent Kaiser, University of Sydney, AUSTRALIA
4:00-6:30 Coffee/Tea at Registration Tables
Plaza (Outside Price Center, Level 1)
4:30-5:30 A tribute to Philip Benfey: Networks facilitate the development of roots and scientists
West Ballroom (Price Center, Level 2)
Session chairs: Wolfgang Busch, Salk Institute, Rachel Shahan, UCLA
4:30-4:34 Welcome/Introduction
4:35-4:50 Dominique Bergmann, Stanford University
4:50-5:05 Joe Ecker, Salk Institute
5:05-5:12 Uwe Ohler, Max Delbrück Center and Humboldt University
5:13-5:20 NatalieBreakeld,NewLeafSymbiotics
5:20-5:30 Additional short tributes by former trainees
6:00-8:00 OfcialOpeningofICAR2024
West Ballroom (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chairs: Federica Brandizzi, NAASC & Michigan State University, Keith Slotkin, NAASC & Danforth
Center & University of Missouri, Columbia
6:00-6:15 Welcome to ICAR 2024 and to San Diego. Introduce ICAR Ombuds: Dr Laura Minero
6:15-6:48 P1-1 Keynote 1 Introduced by Federica Brandizzi
Molecular path into plant cell reprogramming Keiko Sugimoto RIKEN CSRS, JAPAN
DAY 1: Monday July 15th
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6:49-7:06 P1-2 Inaugural NAASC Award for Excellence In Supporting Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging in
the Arabidopsis Community Introduced by Joanna Friesner NAASC
Black in Plant Biology – A perspective Terri Long North Carolina State University, USA
7:07-7:40 P1-3 Keynote 2 Introduced by Keith Slotkin
Whysopolarized?Howplantcellsdeneasymmetry
Dolf Weijers Wageningen University, THE NETHERLANDS
7:41-7:58 P1-4 Inaugural NAASC Award for Excellence In Supporting Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging in
the Arabidopsis Community Introduced by Mentewab Ayalew NAASC & Spelman College
Planting equity: Using our spaces to cultivate growth and celebrate success
Beronda Montgomery Grinnell College USA
8:00-9:30 ICAR 2024 WELCOME RECEPTION
Shores Diner (Adjacent to Price Center)
8:00-11:30 Registration
Plaza, Outside Price Center, Level 1
8:00-onward Posters&ExhibitBoothsmaybesetup(rstsession:today,5-9:30pm)
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room, Price Center, Level 2
8:00-9:30 ArtShowsetupforartistparticipants(rstshow:today,5-9:30PM)
Bear Room, Price Center Level 2
9:00-10:30 Plenary: Development, Stress, Plasticity
West Ballroom (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chairs: Liang Song NAASC & University of British Columbia; Arif Ashraf Howard University
9:00-9:30 P2-1 The ubiquitin proteasome system: Advances, challenges, and outlook for combined stress tolerance
Sophia Stone Dalhousie University CANADA
9:30-10:00 P2-2 TERMINAL EAR1 integrates development with abiotic stress responses in maize
Dave Jackson Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory USA
10:00-10:30 P2-3 The impact of plastid retrograde signals derived from cis-carotenoids in plant development
Patricia León Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México MEXICO
10:30-11:00 Coffee/Tea
Plaza (Outside Price Center, Level 1)
11:00 -12:30 Plenary: Sustainable Crops/Food/Bioproducts, Improving Photosynthesis
West Ballroom (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chairs: Federica Brandizzi NAASC & Michigan State University; Mingyuan Zhu NAASC ECS &
Duke University
11:00-11:30 P3-1 Wheat reproductive development through space and time Cristóbal Uauy, John Innes Centre,
Norwich UK
11:30 -12:00 P3-2 Engineering the plant cell wall to support a sustainable bioeconomy on Earth and in Space
Jenny Mortimer University of Adelaide AUSTRALIA
12:00-12:30 P3-3 Understanding and altering photoprotection: From Arabidopsis to crops and beyond
Krishna Niyogi University of California, Berkeley USA
12:30-1:30 Lunch (Outside)
Matthews Quad (outside, adjacent to Price Center)
DAY 2: Tuesday July 16th
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1:45-3:15 C2 Epigenetics
The Theater (Price Center, Level 1)
Session chairs: Xuehua Zhong Washington University in St Louis; Robert Schmitz University of Georgia
1:45-2:05 C2-1 Enzymatic reactions and RNA codes programming DNA methylation and transcriptional gene
silencing in plants Craig Pikaard HHMI & Indiana University, Bloomington USA
2:05-2:25 C2-2 Nuclear Dynamics of Mobile RISC during Rice Reina Komiya Okinawa Institute of Science and
Technology Graduate University JAPAN
2:25-2:35 C2-3 Basic 3D chromatin architecture is determined by accessible gene borders in Arabidopsis
Pil Joon Seo Seoul National University KOREA
2:35-2:45 C2-4 DNA methylation decay is a marker of organ age in Arabidopsis
Ben Williams University of California, Berkeley USA
2:45-2:55 C2-5 NF-Y mediated dynamic PRC2 recruitment in shaping hypocotyl and grain development
Jun Xiao PCCE, IGDB, CAS CHINA
2:55-3:05 C2-6 Signaling Network and Epigenetic Mechanisms of Brassinosteroid Regulation of Plant Growth and
Stress Responses Yanhai Yin Iowa State University USA
3:05-3:10 C2-7 Investigating CLSY proteins and Pol-IV complex interaction in controlling DNA methylation patterns
in Arabidopsis thaliana Laura Martins Salk Institute for Biological Studies USA
3:10-3:15 C2-8 MBD2 couples DNA methylation to Transposable Element silencing during male gametogenesis
Shuya Wang University of California Los Angeles USA
1:45-3:15 C3 Molecular Mechanisms of Hormone Function
West Ballroom A (Price Center, Level 2)
Session chair: Liang Song University of British Columbia
1:45- 1:50 Introduction Liang Song University of British Columbia CANADA
1:50-2:05 C3-1 Molecular insights into salicylic acid-mediated plant immunity in a changing climate
Christian Danve Castroverde Wilfrid Laurier University CANADA
2:05-2:20 C3-2 A Spatiotemporal Roadmap of Ethylene Signaling at Single-cell Resolution in Arabidopsis
Travis Lee Salk Institute for Biological Studies USA
2:20-2:30 C3-3 A Role for Ethylene Signaling in Regulating CO2- and ABA-mediated Stomatal Movements in
Arabidopsis Tamar Azoulay-Shemer UC San Diego & The Volcani Center USA & ISRAEL
2:30-2:35 C3-4 Arabidopsis SWI/SNF chromatin remodeler SPLAYED (SYD) participates in ABA-inhibited seed
germination Po-Kai Hsu University of California, San Diego USA
2:35-2:40 C3-5 Transcriptomic characterization of ABA sensitivity demonstrates a key role for subfamily III receptors
in ABA transcriptional responses Zenan Xing University of California, Riverside USA
2:40-2:50 C3-6 Cytokinin-mediated acquisition of phloem identity
Ildoo Hwang Pohang University of Science and Technology KOREA
2:50-3 C3-7 Mutant analyses in moss and maize reveal a novel mechanism of AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR
regulation in land plants Michael Prigge University of California, San Diego USA
3:00-3:05 C3-8 The receptors DWARF14 and KARRIKIN INSENSITIVE2 bind and mediate arabidopsis response to
the apocarotenoid zaxinone
Juan Moreno, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology SAUDI ARABIA
3:05-3:15 C3-9 Cross-communication between jasmonate and other hormones Niels Aerts Utrecht University
THE NETHERLANDS
1:45-3:15 C4EnvironmentalandTissue-SpecicRegulationof
Plant Circadian Rhythms
West Ballroom B (Price Center, Level 2)
Session chairs: Jose Pruneda-Paz University of California, San Diego;
Dawn Nagel University of California, Riverside
1:45-1:50 Introduction Dawn Nagel University of California, Riverside USA
1:50-2:05 C4-1Unravelinghoworgan-speciccircadianclocksfunctioninArabidopsis
Jose Pruneda-Paz, University of California, San Diego USA
2:05-2:20 C4-2 Mechanistic insights into the circadian gating of the response to limiting light conditions in
Arabidopsis Maria Nohales Universidad Politécnica de Valencia SPAIN
2:20-2:30 C4-3 Resolving the spatial dynamics of single cell circadian regulatory networks
AlveenaZulqarUniversityofMinnesota,SaintPaulUSA
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2:30-2:45 C4-4TwilightlengthaltersgrowthandoweringtimeinArabidopsisviaLHY/CCA1
Devang Mehta KU Leuven BELGIUM
2:45-2:55 C4-5 Plants sense different photoperiods to independently control growth and reproduction
Joshua Gendron Yale University USA
2:55-3:05 C4-6 An oxygen-sensing mechanism entrains the circadian clock in Arabidopsis
Paolo Triozzi Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies ITALY
3:05-3:15 C4-7 Chaperonin-mediated Winter Cold Response via Circadian Clock Components in Arabidopsis
Ilha Lee Seoul National University KOREA
1:45-3:15 C5Cell-typeSpecicResponsesforPlantResiliencetoStress
The Forum (Price Center, Level 4)
Session chair: Ignacio Rubio-Somoza Centre for Research in Agricultural Genomics (CRAG)
1:45-2 C5-1 Spatiotemporal dynamics of plant response to bacterial infection at single-cell
resolution Jie Zhu University of California, Davis USA
2-2:15 C5-2 Charting the Onset of Drought Recovery in Arabidopsis
Natanella Illouz-Eliaz The Salk Institute for Biological Studies USA
2:15-2:25 C5-3 Rare cell state genes regulate plant immunity
Tatsuya Nobori The Salk Institute for Biological Studies USA
2:25-2:35 C5-4 Single cell and spatial transcriptomics reveal how rice root tissues adapt to soil stress
Mingyuan Zhu Duke University USA
2:35-2:45 C5-5 The other side of the ER bodies - What is the physiological role of root ER bodies?
Arpan Kumar Basak Jagiellonian University Poland
2:45-2:55 C5-6 Measuring the impact of stomatal alignment on pore opening in Arabidopsis thaliana
Julia Keum University of California, San Diego USA
2:55-3:05 C5-7 Molecular Mechanisms of Root Nutritional Immunity
Wolfgang Busch The Salk Institute for Biological Studies USA
3:05-3:10 C5-8 Salt Tolerance Mechanism in the Reproductive Stage by Sodium Transporter AtHKT1
Takeshi Uchiyama Tohoku University JAPAN
3:10-3:15 C5-9 Unveiling Cellular Reprogram for Surface Barrier Restoration in Arabidopsis
Yuree Lee Seoul National University KOREA
3:15-3:45 Coffee/Tea
Plaza (Outside), Theater Lobby, Forum Patio
4:00-5:00 Art Show set up for artist participants
Bear Room, Price Center Level 2
3:45-5:15 C6 A Systems Approach to Decipher Plant Cell Wall Dynamics
The Theater (Price Center, Level 1)
Session chairs: Nancy Soni Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU);
Klaudia Ordyniak Umeå Plant Science Centre
3:45-4 C6-1 Plant cell wall dynamics during pathogen infection: deciphering the function of Leucine Rich Repeat-
Malectin Receptor Kinases in perceiving wall glycans and triggering immune responses
Antonio Molina Fernández Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (UPM) SPAIN
4-4:10 C6-2 Plant B-mannanases with a dual persona: Breaking bonds to build cell walls
Talia Jacobson University of Florida USA
4:10-4:15 C6-3 Interplay between cell wall integrity and cell cycle dynamics in plant biology
Nancy Soni Norwegian University of Science and Technology NORWAY
4:15-4:20 C6-4 A Comprehensive Exploration of Cell Wall Dynamics Mechanisms and Responses in Plants
Klaudia Ordyniak Umeå Plant Science Centre SWEDEN
4:20-4:35 C6-5 Maintaining cell wall integrity during brassinosteroid-induced cell expansion
Zhiyong Wang Carnegie Institution for Science USA
4:35-4:45 C6-6TheroleofmechanosensinginatorganformationJordanFerriaEcolePolytechniqueFRANCE
4:45-4:55 C6-7 The involvement of pectin-synthesizing enzyme GAUT10 in auxin-dependent cell wall formation and
root development Megan Detemple Iowa State University USA
4:55-5:05 C6-8 JAGGER localization and function are dependent on GPI anchor addition
Sílvia Coimbra Universidade do Porto PORTUGAL
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5:05-5:15 C6-9 Cell to cell communication mediated by NRT18 at root tips under high nitrate and heavy metal
stresses Jiming Gong Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai CHINA
3:45-5:15 C7 Light and Warm Temperature Crosstalk in Plants
West Ballroom A (Price Center, Level 2)
Session chairs: Anna Zioutopoulou University of Glasgow; Anne-Sophie Fiorucci Université Paris-Saclay
3:45-4:05 C7-1 How plants remember a stressful day – a role for chromatin-based mechanisms
Isabel Bäurle University of Potsdam GERMANY
4:05-4:25 C7-2 Function of photobodies in phytochrome B signaling Meng Chen University of California, Riverside
4:25-4:35 C7-3 Above ground plant-to-plant electrical signaling mediates network acquired acclimation
StanisławKarpinskiWarsawUniversityofLifeSciencesPOLAND
4:35-4:45 C7-4 Translational Regulation of Photomorphogenesis and Heat Stress Response Mediated by SPA kinases
Mei-Chun Cheng National Taiwan University, Taipei TAIWAN
4:45-4:55 C7-5 Regulatory networks of thermal response in plants
Sourav Mukherjee Monash University AUSTRALIA
4:55-5:15 C7-6 Reduced Environmental Plasticity In Pennycress Improves Responses To Competition And Climate
Change Dimitri Nusinow Donald Danforth Plant Science Center USA
3:45-5:15 C8 Pushing the Boundaries of Single cell omics Technologies and Applications
West Ballroom B (Price Center, Level 2)
Session chairs: Rachel Shahan UCLA; Trevor Nolan Duke University, Sixue Chen University of Mississippi
3:45-4 C8-1 Understanding phloem development cell-by-cell Yka Helariutta University of Helsinki Finland
4-4:15 C8-2 Unveiling spatiotemporal control of Arabidopsis root growth and development
Trevor Nolan Duke University USA
4:15-4:20 C8-3 Age dependency in root development Pablo Szekely Duke University USA
4:20-4:30 C8-4 A single nuclei transcriptome atlas of the Arabidopsis periderm uncovers a developmental switch for
phellem cell maturation Charlotte Miller The Salk Institute for Biological Studies USA
4:30-4:40 C8-5 Cell transcriptional states are dynamic during germination
Mathew Lewsey La Trobe University AUSTRALIA
4:40-4:50 C8-6 Single-nuclei sequencing reveals cellular heterogeneity and differentiation dynamics within the shoot
apical meristem Sebastian Moreno Sainsbury Laboratory, University of Cambridge UK
4:50-4:55 C8-7 Single-cell transcriptomic analysis to investigate the mechanism of cell fate reprogramming of
differentiated epidermis during shoot regeneration Hatsune Morinaka RIKEN JAPAN
4:55-5 C8-8 GeneSys: Generative Modeling for Developmental System Che-Wei Hsu Duke University USA
5-5:15 C8-9 Single-cell proteomics differentiates Arabidopsis root cell types Justin Walley Iowa State University
3:45-5:15 C9 Robustness and Resilience: Surviving a Changing Climate
The Forum (Price Center, Level 4)
Session chairs: Aman Husbands and Doris Wagner; University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
3:45-4 C9-1 Trade-off in speed versus robustness Adrienne Roeder Cornell University USA
4-4:15 C9-2 Transcription factor and chromatin-based heat memory in plants
Nobutoshi Yamaguchi, Nara Institute of Science and Technology JAPAN
4:15-4:25 C9-3 Modulating plant growth and thermotolerance in Arabidopsis Eirini Kaiserli University of Glasgow
4:25-4:40 C9-4 Tracking molecular mechanisms of stomatal adaptation to climate change with herbaria
Patricia Lang University of California, Berkeley USA
4:40-4:50 C9-5 A negative feedback loop between LEAFY and TERMINAL FLOWER 1 robustly safeguards
inorescenceindeterminacyDorisWagnerUniversityofPennsylvania,PhiladelphiaUSA
4:50-4:55 C9-6 Temperature-Dependent Suppression of Ca2+ Signaling During Effector-Triggered Immunity in
Plants Richard Hilleary Duke University USA
4:55-5 C9-7 Ethylene-mediated metabolic priming increases growth and stress tolerance in Arabidopsis thaliana
Esha Dutta University of Tennessee, Knoxville USA
5-5:05 C9-8 Deciphering the cis-regulatory code underlying the response to elevated temperature in Arabidopsis
thaliana Rajneesh Singhal Michigan State University USA
5:05-5:15 C9-9 Elucidating the mechanisms of GTR1/NPF210-regulated root architecture under salt stress in
Arabidopsis Ya Yun Wang National Taiwan University TAIWAN
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5:00-9:30 Poster & Exhibit Hall open for poster browsing and visiting exhibitors
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room (Price Center, Level 2)
5:00-9:30 ICAR Art Show Open for Browsing, Bear Room (Price Center, Level 2)
5:30-6:30 C10 Tiny Pores With Global Impact
The Theater (Price Center, Level 1)
Session chairs: Toshinori Kinoshita Nagoya University, Izumi Mori Okayama University, Hannes Kollist
University of Tartu, Julian I Schroeder University of California, San Diego
5:30-5:38 C10-1 Warming temperature triggers stomatal opening by enhancement of photosynthesis and ensuing
guard cell CO2 sensing and signaling Nattiwong Pankasem University of California, San Diego USA
5:38-5:48 C10-2 Guard cell starch degradation and fast stomatal opening in plants Diana Santelia ETH Zurich
Switzerland
5:48-5:56 C10-3 Utilizing stomatal CO2 signaling by HT1 kinase for manipulating plant water use
Hannes Kollist University of Tartu Estonia
5:56-6:04 C10-4 Light-induced stomatal opening through the regulation of plasma membrane H+-ATPase in guard
cells Toshinori Kinoshita Nagoya University Japan
6:04-6:13 C10-5 Heterotrimeric G protein regulation of the stomatal response to CO2
Sarah Assmann Penn State University, University Park USA
6:13-6:20 C10-6 Guard cell-type ALMTs: Structural insights into bell-shaped voltage-dependency and stomatal
movement Izumi Mori Okayama University JAPAN
6:20-6:30 C10-7 ERC Sympore project: New insights into composition, structure and transport mechanisms of
plasmodesmata Wolf Frommer Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf Germany
5:30-6:30 C11 Charting the Course and Weathering Storms: Organizational Practices and Individual
Actions that Support Scientists as they Navigate Career Transitions
West Ballroom B (Price Center, Level 2)
Session chairs: Mary Williams, ASPB, Mentewab Ayalew, Spelman College
Introduction Mentewab Ayalew Spelman College USA
Panelist Kevin Cox WUSTL & Danforth Center USA
Panelist Jose Dinneny Stanford University USA
Panelist Dior Kelley Iowa State University USA
Panelist Roger, Innes Indiana University USA
Panelist Dawn Nagel University of California, Riverside USA
Panelist Imani Madison North Carolina State University USA
Panelist Devang Mehta KU Leuven BELGIUM
Panelist Roman Ramos Báez, University of Chicago USA
Panelist Bernice Waweru John Innes Centre UK
Panelist Mary Williams ASPB USA
5:30-6:30 C12 Genomic Features and Mechanisms of Mutation
West Ballroom A (Price Center, Level 2)
Session chair: Ksenia Krasileva University of California, Berkeley
5:30-5:42 C12-1 Contributions of mutation and selection to the rapid, intraspecies evolution of Arabidopsis NLRs
Chandler Sutherland University of California, Berkeley USA
5:42-5:54 C12-2 Understanding mutational processes from Arabidopsis pangenome graphs Zhigui Bao Max Planck
Institute for Biology, Tübingen GERMANY
5:54-6:06 C12-3 DNA repair under heat stress: the role of X-family DNA Polymerase
Clair Wootan University of Minnesota USA
6:06-6:18 C12-4 Population genetic consequences and causes of mutation rate heterogeneity in Arabidopsis thaliana
Mariele Lensink University of California, Davis USA
6:18-6:30 C12-5 Sequence and epigenetics of active and silenced nucleolus organizers in Arabidopsis
Dalen Fultz Indiana University, Bloomington USA
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5:30-6:30 C13 Chemical Genetics in Arabidopsis Research: Recent Advances and Applications
The Forum (Price Center, Level 4)
Session chair: Xiaohui Li, Purdue University
5:30-5:46 C13-1 A chemical genetic screen uncovers novel modulators of exocytosis in Arabidopsis
Xiaohui Li Purdue University USA
5:46-5:59 C13-2 Novel Bio-stimulant Molecules Enhancing Root System Vigor
Miguel A Moreno-Risueno Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (UPM) SPAIN
5:59-6:12 C13-3 Time-resolved MAPK activation shapes dynamics in plant defense responses
Hoo Sun Chung Incheon Global Campus KOREA
6:12-6:25 C13-4 The mobile transcription factor SPL13 controls a root apical meristem phase change by triggering
oriented cell divisions Yanbiao Sun Ghent University BELGIUM
6:25-6:30 C13-5 Uncovering genetic factors involved in retinal-mediated development across the Green Lineage
Gabrielle Meza University of California, San Diego USA
5:00-9:30 Poster & Exhibit Hall open for poster browsing and visiting exhibitors
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room, (Price Center, Level 2)
5:00-9:30 ICAR Art Show open for browsing
Bear Room (Price Center, Level 2)
6:30-9:00 Meet the Editors’ Table:
Root and Shoot Intitative (6:30-7)
The Plant Cell (7-7:30)
The Plant Journal (7:30-8)
Plant Physiology (8-8:30)
New Phytologist (8:30-9)
East Ballroom, Price Center Level 2
7:00-8:00 Poster Session 1: Even # posters (presenters of even # posters: stand by your poster)
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room, Price Center Level 2
8:00-9:00 Poster Session 1: Odd # posters (presenters of odd # posters: stand by your poster)
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room,, Price Center Level 2
9:30 pm Doors Close
East Ballroom, Roosevelt College Room & Bear Room, Price Center Level 2
DAY 3: Wednesday July 17th
7:00-8:15 “Weed Stampede” 5K Fun Run/Walk (free, participants must sign a waiver before
participating)
Triton Fountain, South Side Price Center, outside, across from Matthews Quad lunch spot
8:00-11:30 Registration
Plaza, Outside Price Center, Level 1
9:00-10:30 Plenary: Epigenetics, small RNAs
West Ballroom (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chairs: Mary Gehring, NAASC & Whitehead Inst., MIT; Aman Husbands, University of
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
9:00-9:30 P4-1 Epigenetic regulation of plant germline development. Xiaoqi Feng Institute of Science and
Technology Austria AUSTRIA
9:30-10:00 P4-2 Transposon-triggered epigenetic chromatin dynamics modulate Arabidopsis pathogen response.
Pablo Manavella Instituto de Hortofruticultura Subtropical y Mediterránea “La Mayora” SPAIN
10:00-10:30 P4-3 RNA-directed DNA Methylation as a mechanism of parental control during seed development
Rebecca Mosher University of Arizona, Tucson USA
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10:30-11:00 Coffee/Tea
Plaza (Outside Price Center, Level 1)
11:00 -12:30 Plenary: Reproduction, Regeneration, Cell Identity
West Ballroom (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chairs: Adrienne Roeder, NAASC & Cornell University; Sharon Kessler, NAASC & Purdue University
11:00-11:30 P5-1Reciprocalconversionbetweenannualandpolycarpicperennialoweringbehaviourinthe
Brassicaceae. Jia-Wei Wang Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai CHINA
11:30-12:00 P5-2 An environmentally responsive dichotomy in cell lineages of the root.
Ryan Lister University of Western Australia, Perth AUSTRALIA
12:00-12:30 P5-3 Peptide/receptor-mediated signaling controls fertilization success in Arabidopsis.
Li-Jia QU Peking University CHINA
12:30-1:30 Lunch (Outside)
Matthews Quad (outside, adjacent to Price Center)
1:45-3:15 C14 Epigenome and Epitranscriptome in Environmental Stress Signaling and Memory
The Theater (Price Center, Level 1)
Session chairs: Ullas Pedmale, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory; Clara Richet-Bourbousse, Sorbonne
University, Isabel Baurle, University of Potsdam
1:45- 1:50 Introduction
1:50-2:05 C14-1 Primed plants don’t forget: Epigenetic drivers of immune memory
JurriaanTonUniversityofShefeldUK
2:05-2:20 C14-2 Epigenome reprogramming for cell identity and survival
Doris Wagner University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia USA
2:20-2:35 C14-3 Chromatin control of developmental reprogramming in response to environmental challenges
Sibum Sung University of Texas, Austin USA
2:35-2:43 C14-4InteractionofIBM1andVHAE2inowersmayexplaintransgenerationalinstabilityof
hypomethylated lines Robyn Emmerson University of Birmingham UK
2:43-2:51 C14-5 High-throughput capture of transcription factor-driven epigenome dynamics in plant-environment
interactions Mark Zander Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey USA
2:51-2:59 C14-6 The Plant 3D Genome: Elevated CO2 Drives Epigenetic Reprogramming & Chromatin Dynamics in
Arabidopsis Thaliana Scott Lewis Donald Danforth Plant Science Center USA
2:59-3:07 C14-7 BAS chromatin remodeler determines brassinosteroid-induced transcriptional activation and growth
in Arabidopsis Chenlong Li Sun Yat-Sen University CHINA
3:07-3:15 C14-8 Mechanisms enabling the regulation of the guard cell genome by a changing environment.
Charles Seller University of California, San Diego USA
1:45-3:15 C15 Cell Fate Control and Organogenesis: Towards Understanding and Imaging Complex
Tissues
West Ballroom A (Price Center, Level 2)
Session chairs: Margot Smit, ZMBP, Tuebingen; Yan Ma. Gregor Mendel Institute of Molecular Plant
Biology; Avilash Singh Yadav, Cornell University
1:45- 2:01 C15-1 How to grow at the organ surface: Root surface cells use mechanical cues to activate edge-based
growth control Zoe Nemec Venza École Normale Supérieure de Lyon FRANCE
2:01-2:17 C15-2 Mechanical interactions between tissue layers underlie plant morphogenesis
Daniel Kierzkowski University of Montréal CANADA
2:17-2:29 C15-3 Growth directions and stiffness across cell layers determine whether tissues stay smooth or buckle
Avilash Singh Yadav Cornell University USA
2:29-2:41 C15-4 Oriented Symmetric Divisions Contribute to Stomatal Patterning Across Eudicots
Kensington Hartman University of California, San Diego USA
2:41-2:53 C15-5Fromchaostoorder:cellfatespecicationandself-organizationduringshootregeneration
Momoko Ikeuchi Nara Institute of Science and Technology JAPAN
2:53-3:05 C15-6SHORTROOTandSCARECROWdynamicsrevealasymmetricdivisionisspeciedearlyinthecell
cycle Cara Winter Duke University USA
3:05-3:10 C15-7 Arabidopsis VPS13 is required for female germline development by regulating the miR390-TAS3-
ARF3pathwayCamillaBanUniversitàdegliStudidiMilanoITALY
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3:10-3:15 C15-8 Proximity labeling and deletion of a conserved domain give insights into mechanistic roles of SPCH
during stomatal development Andrea Mair Stanford University, HHMI USA
1:45-3:15 C16 More Than Growth: Plant Development in Plant-Biotic Interactions
West Ballroom B (Price Center, Level 2)
Session chair: Cris Argueso, Colorado State University
1:45-1:55 C16-1 Lessons from the model: How Arabidopsis is shaping the research on the growth versus defense
antagonism in tomato Marcelo Campos Federal University of Mato Grosso, Cuiabá BRAZIL
1:55-2:15 C16-2ConcertedPlantGrowthandDefenseThroughTargetedPhytohormoneCrosstalkModication
Cris Argueso Colorado State University USA
2:15-2:35 C16-3Howmicrobesinuenceplantregeneration?LiYangUniversityofGeorgiaUSA
2:35-2:50 C16-4 Unravelling metabolic networks controlling defense and growth: Insights from forward genetics
analysis Jeongim Kim University of Florida USA
2:50-3:05 C16-5 CEP signaling coordinates plant immunity with nitrogen status
Jakub Rzemieniewski Technical University of Munich GERMANY
3:05-3:15 C16-6 Logistics of Defense – TGNap1 mediated secretion of antimicrobial proteins
Deepak Bhandari Michigan State University USA
1:45-3:15 C17 Adaptations to Extreme Climate in Arabidopsis Extremophyte Relatives
The Forum (Price Center, Level 4)
Session chairs: Pramod Pantha, Louisiana State University, Guannan Wang, Stanford University
1:45-2:03 C17-1CellTypeSpecicStressResponsesinBrassicaceaeExtremophytes
Guannan Wang Stanford University USA
2:03-2:21 C17-2 Convergent Evolution of Genes and Gene Networks in Brassicaceae Extremophytes Associated with
Salt Stress Tolerance Samadhi Wimalagunasekara Louisiana State University USA
2:21-2:39 C17-3 Arabidopsis halleri as an extremophile model for addressing the genetic basis of natural variation in
physiological traits Ute Kraemer Ruhr University Bochum GERMANY
2:39-2:57 C17-4 C3-C4 intermediate photosynthesis in the Brassicaceae
Andreas Weber Heinrich Heine University GERMANY
2:57-3:15 C17-5 C3 to CAM transition – adaptation to climate change Sixue Chen University of Mississippi USA
3:15-3:45 Coffee/Tea
Plaza (Outside), Theater Lobby, Forum Patio
3:45-5:15 C18 Dynamic Plant Cells: Organelle Dynamics and Cell Division During Development
The Theater (Price Center, Level 1)
Session chairs: Arif Ashraf, Howard University; Carolyn Rasmussen, University of California Riverside; Bo
Liu, University of California, Davis; Jianping Hu, Michigan State University
3:45-3:57 C18-1 The microtubular preprophase band recruits Myosin XI to the cortical division site to guide
phragmoplast expansion during plant cytokinesis
Calvin Haoyuan Huang University of California, Davis USA
3:57-4:09 C18-2 Actomyosin-dependent peroxisome motility in plant metabolism and stress response
Jianping Hu Michigan State University USA
4:09-4:21 C18-3 Polarity-mediated control of microtubule organization regulates division orientation in the stomatal
lineage Andrew Muroyama University of California, San Diego USA
4:21-4:33 C18-4 A conserved role for related LRR-RLKs during formative asymmetric cell divisions
Michelle Facette University of Massachusetts, Amherst USA
4:33-4:45 C18-5 Distinct ADP-ribosylation factor-GTP exchange factors (ARF-GEFs) govern the opposite polarity of
two receptor kinases Jaimie Van Norman University of California, Riverside USA
4:45-4:55 C18-6 Function of nuclear membrane proteins during cell division Arif Ashraf Howard University USA
4:55-5:05 C18-7 The ties that bind: Understanding actin-organelle interactions in plants
Joe Mckenna University of Warwick UK
5:05-5:15 C18-8 Getting there - differential targeting of the plant V-ATPase complex
Upendo Lupanga Heidelberg University GERMANY
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3:45-5:15 C19 Chromatin at Single-cell and Single Molecule Resolution
West Ballroom A (Price Center, Level 2)
Session chair: Josh Cuperus, University of Washington, Seattle
3:45-4:02 C19-1ThegeneregulatorylandscapeofoweringplantsRonanO’MalleyDOE/JGI/LLBNLUSA
4:03-4:20 C19-2 Transcriptional Regulation in Stomatal Development at single cell resolution
Ao Liu Stanford University, HHMI USA
4:21-4:38 C19-3 Global increase of RNA polymerase II activity and of transcriptome size during Arabidopsis
photomorphogenesis Clara Bourbousse Institut de biologie de l’École normale supérieure (IBENS) FRANCE
4:39-4:56 C19-4 Cell-type aware regulatory landscapes governing monoterpene indole alkaloid biosynthesis in the
medicinal plant Catharanthus roseus Chenxin Li University of Georgia USA
4:57-5:15 C19-5 The Arabidopsis regulatory landscape at single molecule resolution
Josh Cuperus University of Washington, Seattle USA
3:45-5:15 C20 Deciphering the Secrets of Microbiomes in Promoting Stress Resilience in Plants – a
Strategy for Achieving Agricultural Sustainability
West Ballroom B (Price Center, Level 2)
Session chairs: Anamika Rawat, Baoda Han, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology
3:45-4 C20-1 Pollen carry bacteria which suppress an opportunistic fungal pathogen that invades ovules during
fertilization Manish Raizada University of Guelph CANADA
4-4:15 C20-2BenecialmicrobemediatedabioticstresstoleranceofhostplantbyABA-mediatedroot
architecture and epigenetic reprogramming Anamika Rawat King Abdullah University of Science and
Technology SAUDI ARABIA
4:15-4:25 C20-3 Antibiotics in plant root microbiomes - a metagenomic analysis
Mentewab Ayalew Spelman College USA
4:25-4:35 C20-4 Elucidating Chemical Signals Dictating Plant Microbiome Assembly And Function
Gozde Demirer California Institute of Technology USA
4:35-4:45 C20-5 FER kinase and cell wall sensors LRX1/2 regulate microbiome in a phosphate-dependent manner
Siyu Song University of British Columbia CANADA
4:45-4:55 C20-6DissectingSoil-borneLegacy:InvolvementofSAandlightsignalsinrecruitmentofbenecial
microbes Run Qi Utrecht University THE NETHERLANDS
4:55-5:05 C20-7 Interactions between plant microbiota, environmental factors, and host immunity: Insights from
gnotobiotic Arabidopsis model Bradley Paasch Duke University USA
5:05-5:15 C20-8 Phyllosphere dysbiosis in Arabidiopsis Reza Sohrabi Duke University USA
3:45-5:15 C21 Synthesis and Function of Plant Specialized Metabolites that Regulate Development and
Stress Responses
The Forum (Price Center, Level 4)
Session chair: Gloria Muday, Wake Forest University
3:45-4:05 C21-1 The chemistry of root development: uncovering small molecule regulators of tissue patterning
Jazz Dickinson University of California, San Diego USA
4:05-4:25 C21-2Identicationofthemodeofactionofthenonproteogenicaminoacidazetidine-2-carboxylicacid
and engineering tolerance in Arabidopsis Craig Schenck University of Missouri USA
4:25-4:40 C21-3 Metabolic regulatory pathways involved in the root apical meristem maintenance in Arabidopsis
thalianaJosephDubrovskyInstitutodeBiotecnologıáMEXICO
4:40-4:55 C21-4 The moonlighting function of a Nudix domain-containing protein in carotenoid biosynthesis and
metabolon assembly Sombir Rao Cornell University USA
4:55-5:10 C21-5 Reprogramming plant specialized metabolism with information-processing synthetic genetic circuits
Mauricio Antunes University of North Texas, Denton USA
5:10-5:15 C21-6 Investigating the effect of environmental stress on metabolite signaling and localization in root
systems Andrea Sama University of California, San Diego USA
5:00-9:30 Poster & Exhibit Hall open for poster browsing and visiting exhibitors
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room, Price Center Level 2
5:00-9:30 ICAR Art Show open for browsing
Bear Room (Price Center, Level 2)
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5:30-6:30 C22 Evolutionary Plant Systems Biology for Climate Adaptation
The Theater (Price Center, Level 1)
Session chairs: Ting-Ying Wu, Institute of Plant & Microbial Biology, Academia Sinica; Devang Mehta,
Department of Biosystems, KU Leuven
5:30-5:42 C22-1PREDICT:AdvancingAccurateGeneExpressionPredictionandMotifIdenticationinPlantStress
Responses Ting-Ying Wu Academia Sinica TAIWAN
5:42-5:54 C22-2 Changing latitudes: how shifting geographic ranges will impact plant developmental synchrony
and what we can do about it Daphne Ezer University of York UK
5:54-6:06 C22-3 Rapid evolution across climates in synchronized global outdoor experiments of Arabidopsis thaliana
Moi Exposito-Alonso University of California, Berkeley USA
6:06-6:18 C22-4 Conservation and divergence of DNA binding sites of SQUAMOSA promoter-binding protein-like
(SPL) transcription factors Carol Huang New York University USA
6:19-6:24 C22-5 Functions of ATM/ATR-SOG1 Module in DNA Damage Response of Marchantia polymorpha Qianqian
Li Ghent University BELGIUM
6:25-6:30 C22-6 Elucidating the role of the plant circadian clock in latitudinal adaptation Aisha-Alexandra Gerhardt
KU Leuven BELGIUM
5:30-6:30 C23 Our Community Effort to Reannotate the Arabidopsis Genome
West Ballroom A (Price Center, Level 2)
Session chairs: Tanya Berardini, The Arabidopsis Information Resource; Nicholas Provart, University of
Toronto
5:30-5:32 Introduction Nicholas Provart University of Toronto CANADA
5:32-5:44 C23-1 A comprehensive re-annotation of long non-coding RNAs for the gapless Arabidopsis thaliana
genome and TAIR12 re-annotation Kyle Palos Cornell University USA
5:44-5:54 C23-2 TAIR’s role in the reference genome reannotation effort
Tanya Berardini Phoenix Bioinformatics USA
5:54-6:06 C23-3 TAIR12: the new telomere-to-telomere referencesequence of Arabidopsis thaliana
Raúl Y Wijfjes Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München GERMANY
6:06-6:18 C23-4 Comprehensive annotation of transposable elements in the TAIR12 Arabidopsis genome
Zhigui Bao Max Planck Institute for Biology Tübingen GERMANY
6:18-6:30 C23-5 Inside-out regulation and dynamics of nucleolus organizers in Arabidopsis
Ramya Enganti HHMI/Indiana University, Bloomington USA
5:30-6:30 C24 Mobile DNA and Genome Plasticity
West Ballroom B (Price Center, Level 2)
Session chair: Jungnam Cho, Durham University
5:30-5:31 Introduction Jungnam Cho Durham University UK
5:31-5:46 C24-1 War and Peace: Transposons and the Evolution of Polyploid Wheat
Yijing Zhang Fudan University CHINA
5:46-6:01 C24-2 Arabidopsis epigenetic inbred lines: a tool to study plant genome plasticity
Marco Catoni University of Birmingham UK
6:01-6:16 C24-3 The evolution of transposable elements and their impact on genomic diversity revealed by pan-
genome and pan-epigenome approaches in plants
Jinfeng Chen Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences CHINA
6:16-6:23 C24-4 Combined DNA Methyltransferase and Histone Deacetylase Mutant Uncovers Novel
Heterochromatic Histone Dynamics in Arabidopsis thaliana
Carl Simmons Washinton University in St. Louis USA
6:23-6:30 C24-5Substratespecicityandproteinstabilitydrivethedivergenceofplant-specicDNA
methyltransferases Jia Gwee Washinton University in St. Louis USA
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7:30-9:00 Posters & Art Show- Final breakdown/removal. Posters & Art must be removed by 9:00 AM
or will be discarded
East Ballroom, Roosevelt College Room & Bear Room, Price Center Level 2
8:00-11:30 Registration
Plaza, Outside Price Center, Level 1
9:00-10:30 Plenary: Adaptation & Engineering For Environmental Stress Response
West Ballroom (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chairs: Gloria Muday, NAASC & Wake Forest University; Mentewab Ayalew, NAASC & Spelman
College
9:00-9:30 P6-1 Characterizing Sweet Uniporters: An Interdisciplinary And Multiscale Approach
Lily Cheung Georgia Institute Of Technology USA
9:30-10:00 P6-2 Directed Restructuring Of The Arabidopsis Genome By Crispr/Cas-Mediated Chromosome
Engineering Holger Puchta Karlsruhe Institute Of Technology GERMANY
10:00-10:30 P6-3FloodResilience:DrownproongStrategiesOfAModelWeed
Rashmi Sasidharan Utrecht University THE NETHERLANDS
10:30-11:00 Town All (All Attendees invited)
West Ballroom (Price Center, Level 2)
NAASC Chairs: Federica Brandizzi, Keith Slotkin, Anna Stepanova
5:30-6:30 C25 New Methods to Accelerate Plant Synthetic Biology
The Forum (Price Center, Level 4)
 Sessionchairs:RomanRamosBaez,UniversityofChicago,CătălinVoiniciuc,UniversityofFlorida
5:30-5:35 Introduction Román Ramos Báez University of Chicago USA
5:36-5:56 C25-1 Utilizing synthetic biology to expand our understanding of plant systems Patrick Shih University of
California, Berkeley USA
5:57-6:07 C25-2 New gene stacking system compatible with all major type IIS cloning technologies in plants Anna N
Stepanova North Carolina State University USA
6:08-6:18 C25-3 A conserved function of TPL corepressors is to nucleate assembly of the transcriptional preinitiation
complex Alex Leydon University of Washington, Seattle USA
6:19-6:29 C25-4 Enhancement of Cas9 protein production through an in vivo protein-RNA tethering
system Yu-Hung Hung California Institute of Technology USA
6:30-9:00 Meet the Editors’ Table:
Development J. (6:30-7)
The Plant Cell (7-7:30)
The Plant Journal (7:30-8)
Plant Physiology (8-8:30)
New Phytologist (8:30-9)
East Ballroom, Price Center Level 2
7:00-8:00 Poster Session 2: Even # posters (presenters of even # posters: stand by your poster)
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room, Price Center Level 2
8:00-9:00 Poster Session 2: Odd # posters (presenters of odd # posters: stand by your poster)
East Ballroom & Roosevelt College Room, Price Center Level 2
9:30 pm Posters & Art may be removed (or Thursday morning: 7:30-9:00 AM)
East Ballroom, Roosevelt College Room & Bear Room, Price Center Level 2
9:30 pm Doors Close
East Ballroom, Roosevelt College Room & Bear Room, Price Center Level
DAY 4: Thursday July 18th
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11:00 -11:30 Coffee/Tea
Plaza (Outside Price Center, Level 1)
11:30 -1:00 C26 The Roles Of Biomolecular Condensates And Their Interactions With The Membrane
System
The Theater (Price Center, Level 1)
Session Chairs: Ruixi Li, Southern University Of Science And Technology, China; Yansong Miao, Nanyang
Technological University; Emilio Gutierrez-Beltran, University Of Sevilla
11:30-11:50 C26-1 How Physico-Molecular Mechanisms Of The Condensate-Membrane Interplay Organize Cells
Roland Knorr Humboldt-Universität Zu Berlin GERMANY
11:50 -12:10 C26-2 Order And Disorder In Clathrin-Mediated Endocytosis
Daniel Van Damme Ghent University BELGIUM
12:10-12:20 C26-3 A Condensates-To-Vapv Conversion Pathway Regulates Autophagy Degradation In Plant Cells
Ruixi Li Southern University Of Science And Technology CHINA
12:20-12:30 C26-4PhaseSeparationInEndomembraneTrafckingInPlants
Xiaofeng Fang Tsingshua University CHINA
12:30-12:40 C26-5 Plant Karyopherin Ka120 Regulates Nuclear Condensation Of The Core Splicing Regulatory Complex
Mac To Coordinate Immune Activation Min Jia University Of California, Berkeley USA
12:40-12:50 C26-6Cell-SpecicPolymerization-DrivenBiomolecularCondensateFormationFine-TunesRootGrowth
Jianbin Su University Of Missouri USA
12:50-1:00 Summary/Conclusions Yansong Miao Nanyang Technological University SINGAPORE
11:30 -1:00 C27 From Perception To Memory: How Plants Adapt To Climate Change
West Ballroom A (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chair: Justyna Olas, Igz E.V.
11:30-11:55 C27-1 Temperature Sensing In Plants Philip Wigge Igz E.V. GERMANY
11:55-12:15 C27-2TissueSpecicHeatStressMemoryJustynaOlasIgzE.V.GERMANY
12:15-12:30 C27-3 Reveille2 Thermosensitive Splicing: A Molecular Basis For The Integration Of Nocturnal
Temperature Information By The Arabidopsis Circadian Clock Matthew Jones University Of Glasgow UK
12:30-12:45 C27-4 The Role Of Pif4’S Transcription Activation Domain In Plant Thermomorphogenesis
Alyssa Stoner University Of Mississippi USA
12:45-1 C27-5 The Role Of Warm Temperature In Regulating Developmental Changes In Arabidopsis Thaliana
Anna Zioutopoulou University Of Glasgow UK
11:30 -1 C28HormonalInuenceOnPlantForm
West Ballroom B (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chair: Dior Kelley, Iowa State University
11:30-11:40 C28-1 Deciphering Athmgb15, An Arid-Hmg Protein In Arabidopsis: Orchestrating The Ja Pathway
Through Myc2 Regulation In Pollen Development Sonal Sachdev Bose Institute INDIA
11:40-11:50 C28-2 The Molecular Core Of Transcriptome Responses To Abiotic Stress And The Role Of Ethylene
Therein Dominique Van Der Straeten Ghent University BELGIUM
11:50 -12:00 C28-3 Vein Patterning By Gnom-Dependent Auxin Diffusion, Transport, And Signaling
Enrico Scarpella University Of Alberta CANADA
12-12:10 C28-4 Agamous Promotes Carpel Initiation By Repressing Cytokinin Signaling
Stefan De Folter Uga-Langebio Cinvestav Irapuato MEXICO
12:10-12:20 C28-5 Gibberellin And Abscisic Acid Transporters Facilitate Endodermal Suberin Formation In Arabidopsis
Eilon Shani Tel Aviv University ISRAEL
12:20-12:30 C28-6 Auxin Modulates Root Hair Formation Through An Arf19 Gene Regulatory Network That Increases
ROS Megan Gerber Wake Forest University USA
12:30-12:40 C28-7 Phytohormonal Regulation Determines The Organization Pattern Of Shoot Aerenchyma In Greater
Duckweed (Spirodela Polyrhiza) Kyungyoon Kim Seoul National University KOREA
12:40-12:45 C28-8 Understanding Anisotropy Growth Regulation By Brassinosteroids
Hitaishi Khandal Israel Institute Of Technology- Technion ISRAEL
12:45-12:50 C28-9 Cell Integrity Maintenance During Hormone Induced Cell Expansion In Arabidopsis Root Ajeet
Chaudhary Carnegie Institution For Science USA
12:50-1:00 C28-10 A Novel Arabidopsis Abc Transporter Spatially Regulates Oscillating Auxin Response And Periodic
Branching In Roots Ana Paez-Garcia Centro De Biotecnología Y Genómica De Plantas SPAIN
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11:30 -1:00 C29 Phenotypic Plasticity In Arabidopsis Thaliana - Mechanisms And Evolution
The Forum (Price Center, Level 4)
Session Chair: Michael Lenhard, University Of Potsdam
11:30-11:45 C29-1 Vegetative Phase Change Alters Plasticity Of Plant Responses To Abiotic Stress
Erica Lawrence-Paul Penn State University, University Park USA
11:45-12 C29-2MetabolicModelingIdentiesDeterminantsOfThermalGrowthResponsesInArabidopsisThaliana
Philipp Wendering University Of Potsdam GERMANY
12-12:10 C29-3 Plasticity Of Leaf Form And Function To Temperature In The Global Weed Capsella Bursa-Pastoris
Michael Lenhard University Of Potsdam GERMANY
12:10-12:20 C29-4 Development-Dependent Morphological Analysis On Leaf Movement Of Arabidopsis Utilizing
Microfocus X-Ray CT Maika Hayashi Nara Institute Of Science And Technology JAPAN
12:20-12:30 C29-5DroughtStressAmpliesLeafMaturationTranscriptionalDynamics
Joseph Swift The Salk Institute For Biological Studies USA
12:30-12:40 C29-6 Alternative Splicing Regulates Root Response To Salinity In Arabidopsis
JoseO’BrienPonticiaUniversidadCatólicaDeChile,SantiagoCHILE
12:40-12:50 C29-7 Integrated Transcriptional Responses To Nitrogen And Light Stresses Modulate Photosynthesis And
Nitrogen-Use Kithmee De Silva University Of Illinois Urbana-Champaign USA
12:50-1:00 C29-8ConservedCis-RegulatorySequencesOfAKeyFloralSpecicationGeneEncodeAntagonizing
Elements That Mediate Phenotypic Robustness In Arabidopsis And Tomato
Amy Lanctot Cold Spring Harbory Laboratory USA
1:00 -2:00 Lunch (Outside)
Matthews Quad (Outside, Adjacent To Price Center)
2:00-3:30 C30 Translational Research From Arabidopsis To
Crop Plants And Beyond
The Theater (Price Center, Level 1)
Session Chairs: Adrienne Roeder, Cornell University; Cris Argueso, Colorado
State University, Joanna Friesner, NAASC
2-2:05 Introduction Adrienne Roeder Cornell University USA
2:05-2:10 C30-1 Diverse Mechanisms Of Adaptive Flexibility Discovered By Multi-Species Analysis Of Stomatal
Development Ido Nir Volcani Institute ISRAEL
2:10-2:30 C30-2 Arabidopsis Research In Expression Element Discovery For Crop Biotechnology Applications
Jennifer To Bayer Crop Science USA
2:30-2:40 C30-3 From Arabidopsis To Brassica Napus: Determining The Regulatory Control Of Floral Transition
Gurpinder Singh Sidhu John Innes Center UK
2:40-2:45 C30-4 A Multidisciplinary Solution To Advance The Circular Economy Of Phosphorus
Catherine Freed University Of Wisconsin, Madison USA
2:45-2:55 C30-5 Construction Of Innovative Platform Based On Arabidopsis, Human Cell Lines, Mice And Vhh For
IdenticationOfDrugsTargetingMetabolome-RelatedHumanDiseases
PawełĆwiekPolishAcademyOfSciencesPOLAND
2:55-3:05 C30-6 Nuenet: Orthologous Nitrogen Network Modules Enhance Nue Outcome Predictions Across Model-
To-Crop Ji Huang New York University USA
3:05-3:10 C30-7 Precision Breeding Using Crispr To Improve Production Traits In Blackberry
Brian Crawford Pairwise Plants USA
3:10-3:30 C30-8 Comparative View Of Fruit Development In Cucumber And Arabidopsis
Xiaolan Zhang China Agricultural University CHINA
2:00-3:30 C31 Long-Distance Signaling In Times Of Stress
West Ballroom A (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chair: Melissa (Hacf) Leeggangers, Utrecht University
2:00-2:18 C31-1 Dalekin Is A Graft-Transmissible Signal That Induces Drought Stress Responses And Enhances
Stress Tolerance. Alexander Cummins University Of Utah USA
2:18-2:36 C31-2 The Interplay Of Wuschel And Jasmonate Signaling In Stem Growth Regulation In Response To
Systemic Wounding Pengfei Fan Heidelberg University GERMANY
2:36-2:54 C31-3 Contribution Of Trehalose 6-Phosphate Synthase 1 To Arabidopsis Thaliana Reproductive
Development Yohanna Miotto Max Planck Institute For Plant Breeding, Cologne GERMANY
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2:54-3:12 C31-4 Jasmonic Acid And Abscisic Acid Modulate Long-Distance Defence Signalling In Arabidopsis
Thaliana Erin Stroud University Of Warwick UK
3:12-3:30 C31-5 Guardians Of The Meristem: Ethylene’S Role In Shielding Plants During Waterlogging For Future
Flooding Stress Through Long-Distance Signaling
Melissa Leeggangers Utrecht University THE NETHERLANDS
2:00-3:30 C32RNAModicationsAndTheirRoleInPlants
West Ballroom B (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chair: Arsheed H. Sheikh, King Abdullah University Of Science And Technology (KAUST)
2:00-2:05 Introduction Arsheed Sheikh King Abdullah University Of Science And Technology SAUDI ARABIA
2:05-2:25 C32-1TheEffectsOfRnaModicationsOnPlantBiologyBrianGregoryUniversityOfPennsylvania,
Philadelphia USA
2:25-2:45 C32-2 N6-Adenosine Methylation Of Mrna Integrates Multilevel Auxin Response And Ground Tissue
Development In Arabidopsis Kamil Ruzicka Czech Academy Of Sciences CZECHIA
2:45-2:55 C32-3SmallRnaBiogenesis:Co-TranscriptionalRegulationAndRnaModicationsJakubDolataAdam
Mickiewicz University, Poznan POLAND
2:55-3:05 C32-4 Genomic Determinants Of Splicing Variation Aiswarya Balakrishnan Monash University AUSTRALIA
3:05-3:15 C32-5ReciprocalRegulationOfM6AModicationAndMirnaProductionMachineriesViaPhaseSeparation-
Dependent And -Independent Mechanisms Songxiao Zhong Texas A&M University USA
3:15-3:25 C32-6 M6A Counteracts Premature Aging In Plants Arsheed Sheikh King Abdullah University Of Science
And Technology SAUDI ARABIA
3:25-3:30 C32-7ChromatinRemodeling,AlternativeRnaProcessingAndM6ARnaModicationInArabidopsis
Szymon Kubala Polish Academy Of Sciences POLAND
2:00-3:30 C33 Seed Biology: Development, Germination And Dormancy
The Forum (Price Center, Level 4)
Session Chairs: Mathew G Lewsey, La Trobe University, Julia Qüesta, Centre For Research In Agricultural
Genomics (CRAG)
2:00-2:05 C33-1 Iron Determines Germination Speed In Seeds
Kumbirai Deon Mandebere Middle East Technical University TURKEY
2:05-2:25 C33-2 Insights On Peptide Signalling For Seed Single-Nucleus Rna-Seq Mary Gehring Whitehead Institute
For Biomedical Research, MIT USA
2:25-2:40 C33-3 Transcriptional Reprogramming In The Arabidopsis Seed-To-Seedling Transition Julia Qüesta Centre
For Research In Agricultural Genomics (Crag) SPAIN
2:40-2:55 C33-4 Evidence For Transgenerational Control Of Seed Physiology During Development By Aba And
Nitrate, Revealed By Combining Physiology With Single Cell Technologies
William Bezodis John Innes Centre UK
2:55-3:05 C33-5 Maternal Regulation Of Starch Metabolism Plays A Pivotal Role During Ovule And Seed
Development Nicola Babolin University Of Milan ITALY
3:05-3:15 C33-6 Unveiling The Signaling Pathway Of Light-Independent Seed Germination
Hira Kazmi University Of Rome, Sapienza ITALY
3:15-3:25 C33-7 Pro-Seed To Seedling: Regulation Of Seed Germination By An Evolutionarily Conserved
Transcriptional Co-Repressor Family Bailan Lu University Of British Columbia CANADA
3:25-3:30 C33-8 Seed Coat Anatomy And Chemical Composition Changes Affect The Seed Imbibition And Seed Coat
Permeability Of Pennycress Transparent Testa 8 (Tt8) Mutants
XinxinDingPacicNorthwestNationalLaboratory(PNNL)USA
3:45-5:15 C34 Visualizing The Dynamics Of Cell Biology During Plant Development And Environmental
Stresses
The Theater (Price Center, Level 1)
Session Chairs: Andrew Muroyama, University Of California, San Diego, Yue Rui, Stanford University
3:45-3:55 C34-1 Myosin Xi-Mediated Bik1 Recruitment To Nanodomains Facilitates Fls2-Bik1 Complex Formation
During Innate Immunity In Arabidopsis Jiejie Li Beijing Normal University CHINA
3:55-4:05 C34-2 Structure And Function Of The Plant Cell Wall – Plasma Membrane Interface
Yue Rui Stanford University USA
4:05-4:20 C34-3 Information Processing Via Cellular Hormone Dynamics
Alexander Jones Sainsbury Laboratory, University Of Cambridge UK
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4:20-4:25 C34-4 Cytosolic Ca2+ Dynamics In Response To Long-Term Nacl Stress In Arabidopsis Rainer Waadt
University Of Münster GERMANY
4:25-4:35 C34-5 Expansion Microscopy To Visualize Subcellular Components In Protoplasts Kevin Cox Donald
Danforth Plant Science Center USA
4:35-4:50 C34-6 Division ‘On The Fly’ – Preprophase-Band-Independent Tangled1 Recruitment In Maize Aimee
Uyehara University Of California, Riverside USA
4:50-5 C34-7 Super-Resolution Analysis Of Single-Molecule Dynamics And Nanoscale Organization In Living
Plants: Improved Approaches And New Results Klaus Harter University Of Tübingen GERMANY
5-5:05 C34-8IntercellularTrafckingOfADevelopmentalProteinEncodingmRNA:AMechanisticDissection
Matias Gleason Cold Spring Harbory Laboratory USA
5:05-5:15 C34-9 Multiple Roles Of Free1 In Regulating Organelle Biogenesis And Function In Arabidopsis Liwen
Jiang The Chinese University Of Hong Kong (Cuhk) HONG KONG, SAR
3:45-5:15 C35 Quantitative Proteomics Applications To Dissect Signal Transduction In Arabidopsis
West Ballroom A (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chairs: Frank Menke, The Sainsbury Laboratory, University Of East Anglia, Norwich, Justin Walley,
Iowa State University , Richard Glen Uhrig, University Of Alberta
3:45-4:05 C35-1 Using Proteomics To Study The Arabidopsis Circadian Clock
Johanna Krahmer University of Copenhagen DENMARK
4:05-4:25 C35-2 Why, How, And What To Eat For Staying Fit? Yasin Dagdas Gregor Mendel Institute, Vienna
Biocenter, Vienna AUSTRIA
4:25-4:37 C35-3 Connecting Membrane Receptor Signalling And Effector-Triggered Immunity Via Helper NLR
Phosphorylation Frank Menke Sainsbury Laboratory, University Of Cambridge UK
4:38-4:50 C35-4IdenticationAndCharacterizationOfANewProteinKinaseThatRegulatesFloweringTime
Through E3 Mono-Ubiquitin Ligases R Glen Uhrig University Of Alberta CANADA
4:51-5:03 C35-5ProteomicsProlingOfProximal-DistalTissue-WidePolarityInArabidopsisAoboHuangRutgers,
The State University Of New Jersey USA
5:03-5:15 C35-6 Subfamily C7 Raf-Like Kinases Mrk1, Raf26, And Raf39 Regulate Immune Homeostasis And
Stomatal Opening In Arabidopsis Thaliana Márcia Gonçalves Dias Queen’S University CANADA
3:45-5:15 C36 Stress Combination: A New Frontier In Plant Sciences
West Ballroom B (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chairs: Ranjita Sinha, Maria Angeles Pelaez Vico, University Of Missouri,
Columbia
3:45-3:47 Introduction Ranjita Sinha University Of Missouri USA
3:47-3:49 Introduction Maria Angeles Pelaez Vico University Of Missouri USA
3:50-4:10 C36-1 Interplay Between Melatonin, Nitric Oxide And Ros In Orchestrating Psii/Psi
Dynamics Under Single
And Combined Abiotic Stresses Rosa Rivero Campus Universitario Espinardo SPAIN
4:10-4:30 C36-2 Nutrient Signaling Crosstalk: Breakthrough Insights From A Combined Stress Study Hatem
Rouached Michigan State University USA
4:30-4:42 C36-3 Wrky48 Negatively Regulates Plant Acclimation To A Combination Of High Light And Heat Stress
Lidia Soto Pascual University Jaume I, Castellón SPAIN
4:42-4:54 C36-4 Exploring Trade-Offs Induced By Herbivore- And Pathogen-Derived Peptide Elicitors Of Immunity In
Legumes Natalia Guayazan Palacios University Of Washington, Seattle USA
4:55-5:05 C36-5CharacterizationOfKeyRegulatorsInMicrorna-MediatedResponsesToPhosphateDeciencyIn
Arabidopsis Root Development Lifang Zhang Cold Spring Harbory Laboratory USA
5:05-5:15 C36-6 Differential Regulation Of Flower And Pod Transpiration Compared To Vegetative Tissue During
Abiotic Stress In Annual Plants Ranjita Sinha University Of Missouri USA
3:45-5:15 C37 Arabidopsis Beyond Arabidopsis - Towards Generalisable Principles In Biology
The Forum (Price Center, Level 4)
Session Chairs: Sridevi Sureshkumar, Sourav Mukherjee, Monash University
3:45-4:05 C37-1SumoCodeInRice:DecipheringTheLanguageOfAnEmergingProteinModicationSystemIn
Crops Ari Sadanandom University Of Durham UK
4:05-4:25 C37-2 Thermal Responses To Human Diseases Via Arabidopsis
Sureshkumar Balasubramanian Monash University AUSTRALIA
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4:26-4:36 C37-3 Arabidopsis Oma1 Generates Different Splicing Variants Encoding Proteins Possessing Different
Lengths And Functioning Redundantly In Regulating Thermotolerance
Der-Fen Suen Academia Sinica TAIWAN
4:37-4:47 C37-4 Ubiquitination Driven Srf3 Nano-Organization Fine Tunes Iron Bioavailability Upon Bacterial
Elicitation Mattieu Platre The Salk Institute For Biological Studies USA
4:48-4:58 C37-5 Widespread Position-Dependent Enhancers In Plants
Yoav Voichek Gregor Mendel Institute, Vienna Biocenter, Vienna AUSTRIA
4:58-5:03 C37-6 Convergence And Constraint In Glucosinolate Evolution Across The Brassicaceae
Amanda Agosto Ramos University Of California, Davis USA
5:04-5:09 C37-7TheBas,ASwi/Snf-TypeChromatinRemodelingComplex,AffectsOrgan-SpecicTranscriptionStart
Site Choice In Arabidopsis Magdalena Gromadzka Polish Academy Of Sciences POLAND
5:10-5:15 C37-8 Mechanisms Of Soil Binding Exudate Release And Their Role In Plant-Soil Interactions Jumana
Akhtar University Of Bristol UK
6:00-9:00 Dinner Party At The Salk Institute
(Separately Ticketed Event, Must Pre-Purchase)
DAY 5: Friday July 19th
8 AM-3 Luggage Hold
West Green Room, Price Center, Level 2
9:00-11:00 Plenary: Plant/Microbe Interactions, Immunity, Disease Resistance & NAASC Awards
West Ballroom (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chairs: Cris Argueso, NAASC & Colorado State University; Xiaohui Li, NAASC ECSS & Purdue
University. Awards Chairs: Dior Kelly, NAASC & Iowa State University; Gloria Muday, NAASC & Wake Forest
University
9:00-9:30 P7-1 Order among chaos: predicting outcomes of plant-Pathogen-microbiome interactions
Cara Haney University of Pittsburgh USA
9:30-9:45 P7-2 Inaugural NAASC Award for Dissemination of Arabidopsis Knowledge. Introduced by Dior Kelley.
From basics to broader impacts: Lessons learned from years of YouTubing
Molly Edwards Science IRL Productions USA
9:45-10:15 P7-3 Arabidopsis leaves are coated with diverse RNAs with a potential to shape microbial communities
Roger Innes Indiana University USA
10:15-10:30 P7-4 Inaugural NAASC Award for Dissemination of Arabidopsis Knowledge. Introduced by Gloria Muday.
Buildingscienceself-efcacyinacourse-basedundergraduateresearchexperience
Alison Crowe University of Washington, Seattle USA
10:30-11 P7-5Cross-kingdomRNAtrafckingbetweenplantsandfungalpathogens
Hailing Jin University of California, Riverside USA
11:00 -11:30 Coffee/Tea
Plaza (Outside Price Center, Level 1)
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11:30 -1 Plenary: Keynotes & NAASC Awards
West Ballroom (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chairs: Cris Argueso, NAASC & Colorado State University, Dior
Kelley, NAASC & Iowa State University
11:30 -12 P8-1 Keynote. Introduced by Dior Kelley.
Understanding how organisms sense water from molecular to ecological scales: Arabidopsis thaliana
FLOE1 as a case study Seung Yon (Sue) Rhee Michigan State University USA
12-12:15 P8-2 Inaugural NAASC Award for Excellence In Supporting Diversity,
Equity, Inclusion and Belonging in the Arabidopsis Community.
Introduced by Cris Argueso.
Efforts with a narrower focus are more broadly successful at supporting
vulnerable students and scientists
Román Ramos Báez University of Chicago USA
12:15-12:30 P8-3 Inaugural NAASC Award for Excellence In Supporting Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Belonging in
the Arabidopsis Community. Introduced by Dior Kelley.
Intentional community building to nurture marginalized plant scientists
Imani Madison North Carolina State University USA
12:30-1 P8-4 Keynote. Introduced by Cris Argueso. Developing a sense of adventure: how roots face a changing
environment José Dinneny Stanford University USA
1:00-2:00 Inaugural NAASC Arabidopsis Community Lifetime Achievement Awards Panel
West Ballroom (Price Center, Level 2)
Session Chairs: Adrienne Roeder, NAASC & Cornell University, Anna Stepanova, NAASC & North Carolina
State University
Joanne Chory, Salk Institute;
Jeff Dangl, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill;
Joe Ecker, Salk Institute;
Elliot Meyerowitz, California Institute of Technology,
Chris Somerville, Open Philanthropy, LLC & University of California, Berkeley (emeritus)
2:00-2:15 OfcialCloseofICAR2024andAnnouncementofICAR2025
Session Chairs: Keith Slotkin, Outgoing NAASC President, Danforth Center & University of Missouri,
Adrienne Roeder, Incoming NAASC President, Cornell University
Announcing ICAR 2025: Daniel Van Damme, VIB, University of Ghent
Close, Thank you, and Safe Travels!
2.15-3:00 Boxed Lunches to go
West Ballroom Foyer
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Poster Numbers
C1-2 Study of vacuole glycerate transporter NPF8.4 reveals a new role of photorespiration in C/N balance Yi-Chen Lin
C2-8 MBD2 couples DNA methylation to Transposable Element silencing during male gametogenesis Shuya Wang
C3-4 Arabidopsis SWI/SNF chromatin remodeler SPLAYED (SYD) participates in ABA-inhibited seed germination
Po-Kai Hsu
C3-5 Transcriptomic characterization of ABA sensitivity demonstrates a key role for subfamily III receptors in ABA
transcriptional responses Zenan Xing
C3-6 Cytokinin-mediated acquisition of phloem identity Ildoo Hwang
C3-7 Mutant analyses in moss and maize reveal a novel mechanism of AUXIN RESPONSE FACTOR regulation in land
plants Michael Prigge
C3-8 The receptors DWARF14 and KARRIKIN INSENSITIVE2 bind and mediate arabidopsis response to the
apocarotenoid zaxinone Juan Moreno
C4-7 Chaperonin-mediated Winter Cold Response via Circadian Clock Components in Arabidopsis Ilha Lee
C5-4 Single cell and spatial transcriptomics reveal how rice root tissues adapt to soil stress Mingyuan Zhu
C5-6 Measuring the impact of stomatal alignment on pore opening in Arabidopsis thaliana Julia Keum
C5-9 Unveiling Cellular Reprogram for Surface Barrier Restoration in Arabidopsis Yuree Lee
C6-3 Interplay between cell wall integrity and cell cycle dynamics in plant biology Nancy Soni
C6-4 A Comprehensive Exploration of Cell Wall Dynamics Mechanisms and Responses in Plants Klaudia Ordyniak
C6-7 The involvement of pectin-synthesizing enzyme GAUT10 in auxin-dependent cell wall formation and root
development Megan Detemple
C7-4 Translational Regulation of Photomorphogenesis and Heat Stress Response Mediated by SPA kinases
Mei-Chun Cheng
C7-5 Regulatory networks of thermal response in plants Sourav Mukherjee
C8-2 Unveiling spatiotemporal control of Arabidopsis root growth and development Trevor Nolan
C8-3 Age dependency in root development Pablo Szekely
C8-7 Single-cell transcriptomic analysis to investigate the mechanism of cell fate reprogramming of differentiated
epidermis during shoot regeneration Hatsune Morinaka
C8-8 GeneSys: Generative Modeling for Developmental System Che-Wei Hsu
C9-6 Temperature-Dependent Suppression of Ca2+ Signaling During Effector-Triggered Immunity in Plants
Richard Hilleary
C9-7 Ethylene-mediated metabolic priming increases growth and stress tolerance in Arabidopsis thaliana Esha Dutta
C9-8 Deciphering the cis-regulatory code underlying the response to elevated temperature in Arabidopsis thaliana
Rajneesh Singhal
C10-7 ERC Sympore project: New insights into composition, structure and transport mechanisms of plasmodesmata
Wolf Frommer
C12-4 Population genetic consequences and causes of mutation rate heterogeneity in Arabidopsis thaliana
Mariele Lensink
C13-1 A chemical genetic screen uncovers novel modulators of exocytosis in Arabidopsis Xiaohui Li
C13-3 Time-resolved MAPK activation shapes dynamics in plant defense responses Hoo Sun Chung
C13-5 Uncovering genetic factors involved in retinal-mediated development across the Green Lineage Gabrielle Meza
C14-4InteractionofIBM1andVHAE2inowersmayexplaintransgenerationalinstabilityofhypomethylatedlinesRobyn
Emmerson
C14-6 The Plant 3D Genome: Elevated CO2 Drives Epigenetic Reprogramming & Chromatin Dynamics in Arabidopsis
Thaliana Scott Lewis
C15-3 Growth directions and stiffness across cell layers determine whether tissues stay smooth or buckle
Avilash Singh Yadav
C15-4 Oriented Symmetric Divisions Contribute to Stomatal Patterning Across Eudicots Kensington Hartman
C15-7 Arabidopsis VPS13 is required for female germline development by regulating the miR390-TAS3-ARF3 pathway
CamillaBan
C15-8 Proximity labeling and deletion of a conserved domain give insights into mechanistic roles of SPCH during
stomatal development Andrea Mair
C16-5 CEP signaling coordinates plant immunity with nitrogen status Jakub Rzemieniewski
C16-6 Logistics of Defense – TGNap1 mediated secretion of antimicrobial proteins Deepak Bhandari
C17-2 Convergent Evolution of Genes and Gene Networks in Brassicaceae Extremophytes Associated with Salt Stress
Tolerance Samadhi Wimalagunasekara
Posters from Oral Presenters
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C18-1 The microtubular preprophase band recruits Myosin XI to the cortical division site to guide phragmoplast
expansion during plant cytokinesis Calvin Haoyuan Huang
C19-2 Transcriptional Regulation in Stomatal Development at single cell resolution Ao Liu
C20-5 FER kinase and cell wall sensors LRX1/2 regulate microbiome in a phosphate-dependent manner Siyu Song
C20-6DissectingSoil-borneLegacy:InvolvementofSAandlightsignalsinrecruitmentofbenecialmicrobesRunQi
C20-7 Interactions between plant microbiota, environmental factors, and host immunity: Insights from gnotobiotic
Arabidopsis model Bradley Paasch
C20-8 Phyllosphere dysbiosis in Arabidiopsis Reza Sohrabi
C21-5 Reprogramming plant specialized metabolism with information-processing synthetic genetic circuits
Mauricio Antunes
C21-6 Investigating the effect of environmental stress on metabolite signaling and localization in root systems
Andrea Sama
C22-2 Changing latitudes: how shifting geographic ranges will impact plant developmental synchrony and what we can
do about it Daphne Ezer
C22-5 Functions of ATM/ATR-SOG1 Module in DNA Damage Response of Marchantia polymorpha Qianqian Li
C22-6 Elucidating the role of the plant circadian clock in latitudinal adaptation Aisha-Alexandra Gerhardt
C24-4 Combined DNA Methyltransferase and Histone Deacetylase Mutant Uncovers Novel Heterochromatic Histone
Dynamics in Arabidopsis thaliana Carl Simmons
C25-4 Enhancement of Cas9 protein production through an in vivo protein-RNA tethering system
Yu-Hung Hung
C26-1 How Physico-Molecular Mechanisms Of The Condensate-Membrane Interplay Organize Cells Roland Knorr
C26-5 Plant Karyopherin Ka120 Regulates Nuclear Condensation Of The Core Splicing Regulatory Complex Mac To
Coordinate Immune Activation Min Jia University Of California, Berkeley USA
C26-6 Cell-SpecicPolymerization-DrivenBiomolecularCondensateFormationFine-TunesRootGrowthJianbinSu
C27-3 Reveille2 Thermosensitive Splicing: A Molecular Basis For The Integration Of Nocturnal Temperature Information
By The Arabidopsis Circadian Clock Matthew Jones
C27-5 The Role Of Warm Temperature In Regulating Developmental Changes In Arabidopsis Thaliana Anna Zioutopoulou
C28-1 Deciphering Athmgb15, An Arid-Hmg Protein In Arabidopsis: Orchestrating The Ja Pathway Through Myc2
Regulation In Pollen Development Sonal Sachdev
C29-4 Development-Dependent Morphological Analysis On Leaf Movement Of Arabidopsis Utilizing Microfocus X-Ray Ct
Maika Hayashi
C29-6 Alternative Splicing Regulates Root Response To Salinity In Arabidopsis Jose O’Brien
C30-4 A Multidisciplinary Solution To Advance The Circular Economy Of Phosphorus Catherine Freed
C30-5 ConstructionOfInnovativePlatformBasedOnArabidopsis,HumanCellLines,MiceAndVhhForIdenticationOf
DrugsTargetingMetabolome-RelatedHumanDiseasesPawełĆwiek
C30-6 Nuenet: Orthologous Nitrogen Network Modules Enhance Nue Outcome Predictions Across Model-To-Crop
Ji Huang
C30-7 Precision Breeding Using Crispr To Improve Production Traits In Blackberry Brian Crawford
C32-4 Genomic Determinants Of Splicing Variation Aiswarya Balakrishnan
C32-5 ReciprocalRegulationOfM6AModicationandmiRNAProductionMachineriesViaPhaseSeparation-Dependent
And -Independent Mechanisms Songxiao Zhong
C32-7 ChromatinRemodeling,AlternativeRnaProcessingAndM6ARnaModicationInArabidopsisSzymonKubala
C33-4 Evidence For Transgenerational Control Of Seed Physiology During Development By Aba And Nitrate, Revealed By
Combining Physiology With Single Cell Technologies William Bezodis
C33-7 Pro-Seed To Seedling: Regulation Of Seed Germination By An Evolutionarily Conserved Transcriptional Co-
Repressor Family Bailan Lu
C33-8 Seed Coat Anatomy And Chemical Composition Changes Affect The Seed Imbibition And Seed Coat Permeability
Of Pennycress Transparent Testa 8 (Tt8) Mutants Xinxin Ding
C34-4 Cytosolic Ca2+ Dynamics In Response To Long-Term Nacl Stress In Arabidopsis Rainer Waadt
C34-8 IntercellularTrafckingOfADevelopmentalProteinEncodingMrna:AMechanisticDissectionMatiasGleason
C35-4 IdenticationAndCharacterizationOfANewProteinKinaseThatRegulatesFloweringTimeThroughE3Mono-
Ubiquitin Ligases R Glen Uhrig
C35-5 ProteomicsProlingOfProximal-DistalTissue-WidePolarityInArabidopsisAoboHuang
C36-4 Exploring Trade-Offs Induced By Herbivore- And Pathogen-Derived Peptide Elicitors Of Immunity In Legumes
Natalia Guayazan
C37-6 Convergence And Constraint In Glucosinolate Evolution Across The Brassicaceae Amanda Agosto Ramos
C37-7 TheBas,ASwi/Snf-TypeChromatinRemodelingComplex,AffectsOrgan-SpecicTranscriptionStartSiteChoiceIn
Arabidopsis Magdalena Gromadzka
C37-8 Mechanisms Of Soil Binding Exudate Release And Their Role In Plant-Soil Interactions Jumana Akhtar
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P1-1 Deciphering the interplay between growth responses to temperature and nitrate nutrition Anne-Sophie Fiorucci
P1-2 Induced environmental adaptations to increase stress tolerance in plants Katreena Gundran
P1-3 Understanding FPN3: Iron homeostasis and root suberization Ahmed Ali
P1-4 Temporal dynamics of heat stress response in rice Samantha Cordingley
P1-5 Investigation of the role of XRN4 in plant circadian system and drought tolerance Xinmeng Liu
P1-6 Exploring Arabidopsis thaliana SUMO machinery components in the response to environmental stress
Pedro Humberto Castro
P1-7 PP2A Dephosphorylates PHYTOCHROME INTERACTING FACTOR 3 to Modulate Photomorphogenesis in
Arabidopsis Xingbo Cai
P1-8 Understanding the role of the circadian clock on post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms in response to heat
stress Gabriela Salazar Soriano
P1-9 Transfer of the “stress metabolite” ectoine between soil bacteria and plants Cesar De La torre
P1-10 Posttranslational regulation of FIT transcription factor in Arabidopsis Yi-Tze Chen
P1-11 Investigating the protein-protein interactions that regulate non-photochemical quenching in Arabidopsis thaliana
Raquel Ponce
P1-12 Silver nanoparticles promote asymmetric root growth in Arabidopsis by modulating auxin dynamics Juthamas
Chaiwanon
P1-13 Improving potato adaptation to climate change via the miR156/miR172/miR319 network Ignacio Rubio-Somoza
P1-14 Generation of single and multiple Arabidopsis thaliana mutants in LSU (response to low sulfur) genes and their
analysis. Justyna Piotrowska
P1-15Roleofselectiveautophagyinplantresponsetosulfurdeciencyandconstantlightstress:insightsintocatalase
regulation and peroxisome homeostasis Konrad Jurczewski
P1-16 Genetic and physiological analysis of an Arabidopsis mutant involved in abscisic acid-independent stomatal
closure Satoko Nakae
P1-17 XAANTAL1: A MADS-Box Gene that Links Root Development and Hydric Stress Response Mario Alberto Gutiérrez
Rodríguez
P1-18 InvestigatingthefunctionofImportin-βsintheheatstressresponseofArabidopsisRachelBai
P1-19 Physiological and transcriptomic effects of cytokinin in delaying salt stressed leaf senescence in Arabidopsis and
tomato Malsha Thennakoon
P1-20 Hydrogensulde:aRAP(id)stabilizerYuriTelara
P1-21 Characterizing the role of calmodulin-like proteins in magnesium homeostasis: CML13 interacts with magnesium
transporter MRS2-1 Xiaoyu Yang
P1-22 Phosphate starvation response precedes ABA response under initial conditions of drought stress in plants Yukari
Nagatoshi
P1-23 Image-based phenotyping protocol revealed the dynamic responses under combined abiotic stresses in potato
plants Klara Panzarova
P1-24 The Key to Plant Growth: Understanding Negative Autoregulation of PIF4 in Arabidopsis thaliana Vikas Garhwal
P1-25 Vacuolar biogenesis and fusion as central players during root salt stress response Rowan betz
P1-26 The impact of multifactorial stress combination on reproductive tissues and grain yield of a crop plant María
Ángeles Peláez Vico
P1-27 RoleofpectinmodicationinArabidopsisrootundersulfur-limitingconditionsMonikaKubalová
P1-28 Pepper SUMO E3 ligase CaDSIZ1 enhances drought tolerance by stabilizing the transcription factor CaDRHB1
Hyunhee Joo
P1-29 NitrogenuseefciencyofagriculturalcropsinThailandKulapornBoonyaves
P1-30 Molecularmechanismforhigheradaptationtonitrogen-decientenvironmentsinanArabidopsisnaturalaccession
Keina Monda
P1-31 Phosphate starvation response mobile messenger RNAs represent noncoding transcripts in recipient tissues
Zhiye Wang
P2-1 Plants secrete RNA onto their leaf surface that modulates rapidly in response to biotic stresses indicating a
potential role in plant-microbe interaction Meenu Singla-Rastogi
P2-2 Plant extravesicular sRNAs produced outside the cell are potential messengers in interkingdom
communication Maria Borniego
P2-3 Searching for salivary effectors in herbivorous caterpillars Angel Fernandez Martin
P2-4 Natural variation in Arabidopsis thaliana root responses to microbiota-derived Pseudomonas strains
Charles Copeland
Poster Session P2: Biotic Interactions
Poster Session P1: Abiotic Stress
Poster Session P3: Biotic & Abiotic Stress
Poster Session P4: Applied/Translational Plant Science
Poster Session P5: Biochemistry and Metabolism
Poster Session P6: Cell Biology
ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 34ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 34 01/07/2024 10:0601/07/2024 10:06
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P2-5 Understanding the cooperation of Myzus persicae effectors Mp1 and Mp58 in aiding aphid infestation Jade Bleau
P2-6 A plant endophytic bacterium Priestia megaterium strain BP-R2 isolated from Taiwan coastal plants enhanced
plant growth under salt and drought stresses Hau-Hsuan Hwang
P2-7 Role of GLUTAMATE RECEPTOR-LIKE 2.7 in insect egg perception Maria Mineiro
P2-8 CYCLIN-DEPENDENT KINASE 8 differentially regulates metabolic immunity against Pectobacterium carotovorum in
Arabidopsis Bailey Kleven
P2-9 Subgenome-dominant expression and alternative splicing in response to Sclerotinia infection in polyploid Brassica
napus and progenitors Satyam Priyadarshi
P3-1 Biotic and abiotic stress effects in the mode of action of the plant cell wall integrity maintenance
mechanism Anastasiia Ivanova
P3-2 Unveiling the role of FOCL1: Modulating Guard Cell Structure and Plant Defense Against Drought and
Pathogens Nathalie Leonhardt
P3-3 Cell-autonomous remodelling of plant endoplasmic reticulum architecture and dynamics by the virulent
phytopathogen Pseudomonas syringae Emily Breeze
P3-4 The other side of the ER bodies - What is the physiological role of root ER bodies? Arpan Kumar Basak
P4-1 SAMBA, a member of the APC/C alters growth and fruit metabolites Nubia Barbosa Eloy
P5-1 Determining Localization of the SAV Protein in Arabidopsis thaliana Neha Jag
P5-2 Mapping Metabolite Localization in Maize Roots: A Combined DESI-MSI and HPLC-MS/MS Approach Shihong Luo
P5-3 Characterizing the role of D-erythrose in plant root development and stress response Sinead Cahill
P5-4 TheroleofR2R3-MYBtranscriptionfactorsinthetargetgenespecicityinavonoidbiosynthesisinArabidopsis
thaliana Lennart Sielmann
P5-5 Unravelling the regulation and role of “non-functional” cell wall invertases in Arabidopsis thaliana Luisa Cendejas
P5-6 Impacting Spliceosome Function through Chemical Inhibition in Arabidopsis thaliana Maria Camila Rodriguez Gallo
P5-7 Chemical imaging to elucidate small molecule driven developmental decisions in Zea Mays Abigail Tripka
P5-8 Chemical plasticity of sporopollenin in terrestrial plants Lei Xu
P5-9 Understanding the Role and Metabolic Fate of Glycated Peptides Ulrike Bechtold
P5-10 The metabolite itaconate modulates multiple pathways for plant growth and development Tao Zhang
P6-1 RNA Decay typically contributes to mRNA abundance regulation by opposing the activity of transcription
Leslie Sieburth
P6-2 HowlargecellsinuenceleafatnessinArabidopsisthalianaMauraZimmermann
P6-3 UFMylation in ER-phagy for Plant Stress Responses Baiying Li
P6-4 Exploring the pathway that regulates callus development and shoot regeneration through the nucleoporin PNET1
Kendall Hsieh
P6-5 Altering RBOH Expression Impacts ROS Status, Mitochondrial Density and Autophagy Activity in Arabidopsis
Tapetum Solomon Antonio
P6-6 The Function of TRM13, TRM18, and TRM33 Proteins in the Cell Shape Regulation of Arabidopsis Abu Habib
MdAbdullah
P6-7 Ribosome Biogenesis Factor SQTL1 is Required for Ribosome Assembly and Plant Development Zhi-Xing Lau
P6-8 Interplay Between Phosphatidic Acid and the Nucleus: A Love-Hate Relationship Eliška Škrabálková
P6-9 ATPase catalytic activity and BDH1/2 subunits are necessary for the functions of BRM-associated SWI/SNF
complex in Arabidopsis Rafal Archacki
P6-10 Designing Genetically Encoded Tools for Local Cytoskeleton Disruption in Plant Cells Bianca Lopez
Poster Session P3: Biotic & Abiotic Stress
Poster Session P4: Applied/Translational Plant Science
Poster Session P5: Biochemistry and Metabolism
Poster Session P6: Cell Biology
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P7-1 THE ROLE OF TETRASPANINS AND EXTRACELLULAR VESICLES DURING LEAF SENESCENCE Luke Pickard
P7-2 UncoveringNovelCellType-SpecicInteractorsofSHORTROOT(SHR)inRootDevelopmentSarahVanDierdonck
P7-3 ThecontributionsofAPETALA2,FRUITFULLandSOC1tooraltransitionandinorescencedevelopmentin
Arabidopsis thaliana Kang Wang
P7-4 Elongator complex differentially regulates transcriptomes of Arabidopsis thaliana cotyledons and hypocotyls during
photomorphogenesis Magdalena Jarosz-Ostrówka
P7-5 InvestigatingtherolesofSTMandATH1duringoralorganabscissionSabnamOjha
P7-6 ExploringTheEffectsofRootHairsinNitrogenUseEfciencyintheModelGrassSpecies,Brachypodium
distachyon Mya Mackowski
P7-7 Insight into the novel regulatory pathway mediating root hair growth post-initiation in the temperate grass
Brachypodium distachyon Miguel Angel Rosas
P7-8 Investigating Genetic Components of Retinal Signaling Responsible for Root Development in Arabidopsis
Gwein Marie Gagarin
P7-9 Increasing Carbon Sequestration in Plants by Altering Gene Expression Patterns
Paloma Alvarez-Maldonado Ramirez
P7-10 EngineeringTissue-SpecicSuberinProductionToEnhanceCarbonSequestrationinPlantsLiamSheedy
P7-11 Small Molecule Signaling During Root Tip Regeneration Nathan Stutzman
P7-12 Brassinosteroids and Sepal Outgrowth Byron Rusnak
P7-13 Investigating Arabidopsis sepal shape robustness to mechanical perturbations. Lanxi Hu
P7-14 Transcriptional and Hormonal Control of Hypocotyl Elongation Jun Lim
P7-15 Regeneration-related LRR-RKs involved in endodermal differentiation Ellen Fasth
P7-16 Whole Organism vs Cellular Polyploidy in Arabidopsis Development Lilijana Oliver
P7-17 CIA2 and CIL are important regulators of chloroplast biogenesis during de-etiolation. Pawel Burdiak
P7-18 Illuminating the Impact of Light on Plant Regeneration: A Comprehensive Study Utilizing Automated Image
Analysis Yetkin Caka Ince
P7-19 The ancestral role of the miR156-SPL networkJimFouracre
P7-20 CLE signaling promotes quiescent center divisions through control of CYCD3;3 Anna DiBattista
P7-21 TheinuenceoftranscriptionfactorbZIP63,bZIP1andbZIP53onenergyhomeostasismaintenance
Isis Sebastião
P7-22 Stem Cell Factor Induced Regeneration Jana Wittmer
P7-23 Dissectionofregenerationresponsebytissue-specicinductionandsingle-cellprolingTristanWijsman
P7-24 Elucidatingtranscriptionaldynamicsforepidermalprotectivelayerformationfollowingoralorganabscissionin
Arabidopsis Minsoo Han
P7-25 MUTE promotes stomatal development by directly balancing Auxin response Wenli Wang
P7-26 TheArabidopsistranscriptionfactorbZIP63modulateswinterphotoperiod-relatedtnessRaphaelCampos
P7-27 HowdoWOXgenesinuencelateralgrowthduringdevelopmentofcomplexleaves?LisaBrombach
P7-28 JULGI1-miR165a interaction controls Arabidopsis abaxial-adaxial balance via suppression of DCL1- mediated miR
processing Sangkyu Choi
P7-29 HDA19,anewroleforhistonedeacetylationonthespecicationofgametophyticcellsMartaLaBruna
P7-30 Red light, green light: Developing a tool to explore the essential gene SPT6L in transcriptional repression in
plants Janet Solano Sanchez
P7-31 Robustsepaldevelopmentisassociatedwithuncorrelatedgrowthuctuationsandmicrotubule
dynamics Isabella Burda
P7-32 pH-dependent CLE peptide perception permits phloem differentiation in Arabidopsis roots
Harold Nicholay Diaz Ardila
P7-33 Ultraconserved-Like Non-Coding Sequences in the PLETHORA1/2 Promoter Direct Embryo and Meristem
Development Merijn Kerstens
P7-34 Unravelling the Roles of Cellular Polarity and F-Actin Dynamics in Arabidopsis Stomatal
Development Akanksha Garhewal
P7-35 Arabidopsis pluripotent cell formation can be promoted by the response of vernalization HUNG FU-YU
P7-36 Arabidopsis ERdj3B coordinates with ERECTA-family receptor kinases to regulate ovule development and the heat
stress response Li-Qun Chen
P7-37 DecodingthenalpartofantheropeningAnnaKampova
P7-38 The robustness of wuschel-mediated regulation of CLAVATA3 involves multiple cis-regulatory modules
Vincent Cerbantez-Bueno
P7-39 Timing of Fate Transitions Lab: Studying the temporal regulation of cell fate control during plant development
Margot Smit
P7-40 Effect of shading on trichome formation and CAPRICE -like gene expression in tea (Camellia sinensis var. sinensis)
leaves Juri Wakamatsu
Poster Session P7: Development or Developmental Mechanisms
Poster Session P10: Epigenetics, Chromatin, and Small RNAs
Poster Session P11: Hormones/Hormone Biology
Poster Session P9: Evolution, Ecology, or Population Biology
ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 36ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 36 01/07/2024 10:0601/07/2024 10:06
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P9-1 Disentanglingthegenetictrade-offsbetweenoweringtimeandwateruseefciencyJinseulKyung
P9-2 Evolutionary Imprint of Century-Long Climate Change on Flowering Time Myeongjune Jeon
P9-3 Investigating the Evolutionary Conservation of the ELP456 Sub-complex in Arabidopsis and Yeast Gyung-Tae Kim
P9-4 Genotype-environment association across precipitation regimens reveals the mechanism of plant adaptation to
rainy environments in Arabidopsis thaliana Simone Castellana
P9-5 Exploring the NLR-Effector Interactome: A Journey from Ecological Complexity to Functional
Biology Choghag Demirjian
P9-6 On the relationship between alleles of the immune receptor RPP1 and its oomycete effector ligand ATR1
Miriam Lucke
P9-7 Scaling from genes to ecological community dynamics Matthew Barbour
P9-8 Reconstructing the origins of nuclear auxin reception by the ancestors of the TIR1/AFB and Aux/IAA proteins
Román Ramos Báez
P10-1 Probing Nuclear DNA-dependent RNA Polymerase IV subunit function and assembly in vitro Zheng Tian
P10-2 Unraveling the role of cell ploidy in gene regulation and cell development of nitrate-induced leaf growth in
Arabidopsis thaliana Karin Rothkegel
P10-3 BRMATPaseinterplaywithMINU1andMINU2ATPasesisvitalfororgan-specicalternativeRNAprocessing
regulation in Arabidopsis thaliana Jakub Chalimoniuk
P10-4 OptimizingCUT&TagforhistonemodicationprolinginArabidopsisreproductivetissuesFuxiWang
P10-5 Exploring novel insights into plant miRNA biogenesis: co-transcriptional processing of pri-miRNAs Ileana Tossolini
P10-6 ElucidatingthefunctionalroleofFPAinregulatingoweringtimeJaeHoHan
P10-7 Multiple Classes of Epigenetic Regulators Interact to Regulate Nuclear Morphology and Chromatin Organization in
Arabidopsis Biswajit Ghosh
P10-8 Arabidopsis thaliana small exRNA is enriched in tRNA-derived fragments Madison McGregor
P10-9 EBScontrolstemcellorganizerspecicationbypromotingWOX5transcriptioninArabidopsisrootLihuaZhang
P10-10 The requirements and timing of RNA directed DNA Methylation initiation in Arabidopsis Pratheek Pandesha
P10-11 Whichcomesrst?InvestigatingtheinitiationofRNA-directedDNAMethylationinArabidopsis
thaliana Seth Edwards
P10-12 Machine learning-based feature extraction on ultra-deep long-read RNA-sequencing data to decipher the triggers
of RNA interference and transgene silencing Sandaruwan Ratnayake
P10-13 REM transcription factors and GDE1 shape the maternal DNA methylation landscape through the recruitment of
RNA Polymerase IV transcription complexes in Arabidopsis. Zhongshou Wu
P10-14 MCM4: A Novel Factor Preserving DNA Methylation and Governing Genome Stability Xinrui Ji
P11-1 Analysis of the Gene Expression Regulatory Mechanisms of NPR1-TGA-WRKY Signaling in Salicylic Acid-Responsive
Plant Immunity Mika Nomoto
P11-2 Involvement of TOUGH mediated miRNA dynamics in strigolactone mediated developmental events in
Arabidopsis Sibu Simon
P11-3 Arabidopsis HY5 enhances jasmonates-mediated responses via directly suppressing expression of JAZs genes in
an FIN219/JAR1-dependent manner Hsu-Liang Hsieh
P11-4 It’s all in the Family: Do TPX corepressors each have their own identity? Benjamin Downing
P11-5 VariationsintheLeafAnglesofDifferentRiceCultivarsinResponsetoNutrientDecienciesMikihisaUmehara
P11-6 Engineering Root System via the Ethylene Pathway LAURENCE DENIS
P11-7 Exploration of strigolactone-like activity compounds from plant pathogenic fungi Taiki Suzuki
P11-8 AnalysisoftransgenicArabidopsisinwhichcanonicalstrigolactonesarearticiallyproducedYukiMizutori
P11-9 Architecture and dynamics of the abscisic acid gene regulatory network Niels Aerts
P11-10 IdenticationofDualPhasemolecularregulationofleafsenescencebycytokininisoformsOmarHasannin
P11-11 RALF-induced root growth inhibition depends on ethylene André Daubermann
P11-12 The control of the apoplastic pH determines the hypocotyl response to auxin dosage and light signals Ning Wei
P11-13 Trans-Zeatin and trans-Zeatin N-Glucosides Regulate Cytokinin Signaling and Delay Salt-Stress Accelerated Leaf
Senescence in Arabidopsis thaliana Risheek Khanna
P11-14 Characterization and functional analyses of DOG1-dependent ABA signaling cascade Noriyuki Nihimura
P11-15 Increase of endogenous cytokinin promotes adventitious shoot formation in ipecac Karin Okazaki
P11-16 The RLCK7 family protein PBL29 enhances Fumonisin B1-induced cell death in Arabidopsis Dami Yang
Poster Session P10: Epigenetics, Chromatin, and Small RNAs
Poster Session P11: Hormones/Hormone Biology
Poster Session P9: Evolution, Ecology, or Population Biology
ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 37ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 37 01/07/2024 10:0601/07/2024 10:06
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P11-17 Genetic Dissection of the Adenylate Cyclase Domain of TIR1/AFB Auxin Receptors in Moss Ellyse Ku
P11-18 Investigation of Auxin and Cytokinin transport with bioluminescent Arabidopsis thaliana sensors growing in
near-natural conditions Mike Karampelias
P12-1 The Practical Haplotype Graph Version 2: a streamlined and simple pangenome system Ana Berthel
P12-2 Divergence and Hybridisations of NLR Regions in Genomes: Insights from the IBSpy (Identity-By-State in python)
Pipeline Bernice Waweru
P12-3 Enhancing Plant Thermal Biology Research with Cost-Effective Heating Devices for Confocal
Microscopy Yongjian Qiu
P12-4 StreamlinedpAG-MNasepuricationforCUT&RUNTaijiKawakatsu
P12-5 24-HourTime-lapseSingle-nucleusTranscriptomicsRevealCell-typespecicCircadianRhythmsYuweiQin
P12-6 Annotating plant genomes at single-nucleotide resolution with a DNA foundation model Jingjing Zhai
P12-7 Polyvalent guide RNAs for CRISPR antivirals Mohammad Salehin
P12-8 A modular geminivirus expression vector to facilitate protein expression and gene targeting in plants Jose Alonso
P12-9 Disrupting Upstream ORF Translation for Enhanced Protein Production Jade Lyons
P12-10 A machine-learning pipeline to quantify stomata from whole leaf images Gabriel Angres
P12-11 Enhancement of Cas9 protein production through an in vivo protein-RNA tethering system Yu -Hung Hung
P12-12 Plant Accessible Tissue Clearing Solvent System (PATCSOS) for 3-D Imaging of Whole Plants Hantao Zhang
P13-1 The core morning clock component CCA1 positively regulates the expression of UPR target genes for ER stress
recovery Gyeongik Ahn
P13-2 A conserved DNA-binding protein is involved in both biotic and abiotic stress response in plants through
differential phosphorylation. Evan Sandoval
P13-3 Genetic suppressor screening to identify novel symbiotic genes in the model legume Medicago truncatula
Muthu Venkateshwaran
P13-4 Auxin induces phosphorylation of Thr881 of plasma membrane H+-ATPase during hypocotyl elongation
Koji Takahashi
P13-5 Biochemical and Chemical Approaches for Elucidating Stomatal CO2 Sensing and Signal
Transduction Yohei Takahashi
P13-6 TOR Drives Accumulation of TAGs and Amino Acids through Transcriptional Rewiring in a Green
Alga Shivani Upadhyaya
P13-7 NIN-LIKE PROTEINs 6 and 7 function redundantly as a repressors under ammonium provision Yi-Fang Tsay
P13-8 TurboID-mediatedidenticationofLWD1-interactingproteinsuncoversnovelregulatorsoftheArabidopsis
circadian clock Chun-Kai Huang
P14-1 Transforming Plant Gene Annotation through a DNA Foundation Model Zong-Yan Liu
P15-1 Organizing resource information of Arabidopsis individual mutant lines to the RIKEN BRC Resource Catalog ‘Exp-
Plant‘ Satoshi Iuchi
P15-2 Link late-stage promoters and aging associated root growth regulators to engineer late-season root growth
Feng Qin
Poster Session P13: Signal Transduction
Poster Session P14: Systems, Synthetic, and Computational Biology
Poster Session P15: Other topics
Poster Session P12: New Research Tools, Technology or Resources
ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 38ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 38 01/07/2024 10:0601/07/2024 10:06
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Root morphology in function of
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33
ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 1ICAR2024_Program-Book_230624.indd 1 25/06/2024 22:4925/06/2024 22:49
#ICAR2025
International Conference
on Arabidopsis Research
ICAR2025
Ghent, Belgium
June 16th-20th 2025
http://www.icar2025.com/
Keynote Speakers
Paula Casati
Jiri Friml
Jane Parker
Hosted at De Bijloke
6 Plenary Sessions
20+ Concurrents/Workshops
2x Poster Sessions
Social at Viernulvier Concertzall