Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 16
pro vyhledávání: '"Juliana L. Matos"'
Autor:
Ane H. Medeiros, Flávia P. Franco, Juliana L. Matos, Patrícia A. de Castro, Ludier K. Santos-Silva, Flávio Henrique-Silva, Gustavo H. Goldman, Daniel S. Moura, Marcio C. Silva-Filho
Publikováno v:
Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions, Vol 25, Iss 5, Pp 613-624 (2012)
In sugarcane fields, colonization of the stalk by opportunistic fungi usually occurs after the caterpillar Diatraea saccharalis attacks the sugarcane plant. Plants respond to insect attack by inducing and accumulating a large set of defense proteins.
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/c8c5f66944e24ba2b48d9524ea3a44c0
Publikováno v:
PLoS Biology, Vol 22, Iss 8, p e3002770 (2024)
The development of multicellular organisms requires coordinated changes in gene expression that are often mediated by the interaction between transcription factors (TFs) and their corresponding cis-regulatory elements (CREs). During development and d
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/405abd88e71c42f7a38942df6f8bf1f6
Autor:
Juliana L Matos, On Sun Lau, Charles Hachez, Alfredo Cruz-Ramírez, Ben Scheres, Dominique C Bergmann
Publikováno v:
eLife, Vol 3 (2014)
The presumed totipotency of plant cells leads to questions about how specific stem cell lineages and terminal fates could be established. In the Arabidopsis stomatal lineage, a transient self-renewing phase creates precursors that differentiate into
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/75cedbb9031c4631800c5b0809e99bb8
Publikováno v:
Trends in Biotechnology. 36:882-897
Genetic engineering of plants has enhanced crop productivity in the face of climate change and a growing global population by conferring desirable genetic traits to agricultural crops. Efficient genetic transformation in plants remains a challenge du
Autor:
John P. Vogel, Joseph A. Berry, Michael T. Raissig, Akhila Bettadapur, Emily Abrash, M. Ximena Anleu Gil, Hannah R. Allison, Grayson Badgley, Dominique C. Bergmann, Juliana L. Matos, Ari Kornfeld
Publikováno v:
Science. 355:1215-1218
Making more of your stomata Stomata on grasses are made up of two guard cells and two subsidiary cells, and they perform better than stomata on broad-leaved plants, which are made up only of two guard cells. Raissig et al. found that the MUTE transcr
Autor:
Gozde S. Demirer, Myeong-Je Cho, Huan Zhang, Younghun Sung, Francis J. Cunningham, Abhishek J. Aditham, Natalie S. Goh, Markita P. Landry, Roger Chang, Linda Chio, Brian J. Staskawicz, Juliana L. Matos
Publikováno v:
Nature nanotechnology. 14(5)
Genetic engineering of plants is at the core of sustainability efforts, natural product synthesis, and agricultural crop engineering. The plant cell wall is a barrier that limits the ease and throughput with which exogenous biomolecules can be delive
All multicellular organisms must properly pattern cell types to generate functional tissues and organs. The organized and predictable cell lineages of the Brachypodium leaf enabled us to characterize the role of the MAPK kinase kinase gene BdYODA1 in
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::efa73bc41abd731dd60506f511bd6906
https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6078329/
https://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6078329/
Autor:
James A. H. Murray, Farah Patell, Annika K. Weimer, Walter Dewitte, Juliana L. Matos, Nidhi Sharma, Dominique C. Bergmann
Publikováno v:
Development.
Plants, with cells fixed in place by rigid walls, often utilize spatial and temporally distinct cell division programs to organize and maintain organs. This leads to the question of how developmental regulators interact with the cell cycle machinery
Autor:
Dominique C. Bergmann, Walter Dewitte, Juliana L. Matos, James A. H. Murray, Annika K. Weimer
Plants, with cells fixed in place by rigid walls, often utilize spatial and temporally distinct cell division programs to organize and maintain organs. This leads to the question of how developmental regulators interact with the cell cycle machinery
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::82d09121aa495d6c3a98b0089bd9835f
https://doi.org/10.1101/207837
https://doi.org/10.1101/207837
Publikováno v:
FEBS Letters. 582:3343-3347
Prohormone proteins in animals and yeast are typically processed at dibasic sites by convertases. Propeptide hormones are also found in plants but little is known about processing. We show for the first time that a dibasic site upstream of a plant pe