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1 A. thaliana contains four malic enzymes (NADP-ME 1-4) to
2 A. thaliana mutants disrupted in the biosynthesis of the
6 ion model led to the identification of 1,220 A. thaliana genes with previously unknown functions, eac
11 by restructuring of the organism that adapts A. thaliana to low-elevation Mediterranean climates.
12 F2 are under selective constraint, but among A. thaliana accessions, AtDDF2 has a higher level of non
13 tic stresses were overrepresented between an A. thaliana autotetraploid and diploid and between two A
21 ated A. thaliana iron transporter (IRT1) and A. thaliana ferritin (FER1) accumulated iron levels 7-18
23 species Arabidopsis arenosa, A. lyrata, and A. thaliana, and show that AGL36-like genes are imprinte
25 rowth is conserved between M. polymorpha and A. thaliana, suggesting that it was active in the common
27 tible systems; N. tabacum 9.8% reduction and A. thaliana 12.3% reduction, but not in the resistant ho
28 ospora rootlets, S. moellendorffii roots and A. thaliana roots compared to the leaves of each respect
30 r exon, and 0.6695 nucleotide structure) and A. thaliana (0.5808 for CDS, 0.5955 for exon, and 0.8839
32 pression of orthologous genes from yeast and A. thaliana that are coregulated with yeast rei1 or with
34 In contrast to allopolyploids, autopolyploid A. thaliana showed the same photosynthetic rate as diplo
36 el of nucleotide sequence divergence between A. thaliana and A. arenosa MIR172 loci is 15-25%, which
41 ab-E and myosin XI phenotypes are rescued by A. thaliana's Rab-E1c and myosin XI-K/E, respectively.
45 though mature miRNA sequences are conserved, A. thaliana and A. arenosa miRNA loci diverge rapidly in
47 d in BR-deficient and BR signaling-deficient A. thaliana mutants, resulting in clustered stomata.
54 growth in the availability of omics data for A. thaliana as well as improvements in data analysis met
56 nt an updated co-functional gene network for A. thaliana, AraNet v2, which covers approximately 84% o
57 f a genome-scale functional gene network for A. thaliana, AraNet, which was constructed by integratin
58 , which generates functional predictions for A. thaliana and 27 nonmodel plant species using an ortho
59 h we have co-immunopurified with AtMSI4 from A. thaliana suspension culture cells and identified by l
62 tion of an unprecedented amount of data from A. thaliana, which has facilitated data-driven approache
63 member of the B-box zinc finger family from A. thaliana and contains a single conserved Zn(2+)-bindi
65 ) transporter, similar to the known one from A. thaliana, is likely absent and could even be harmful
66 report the crystal structure of PRORP1 from A. thaliana at 1.75 A resolution, revealing a prototypic
68 transcriptional analyses in loss of function A. thaliana and P. patens mutants suggest that the trans
69 ion of the defective mutants with functional A. thaliana SWEET1 inhibited glucose transport, indicati
70 d during adaptation of TEV to its novel host A. thaliana To assess the effect that host species may h
72 Targeted gene silencing of BADC isoform 1 in A. thaliana significantly increased seed oil content whe
76 the unique distribution pattern of m(6)A in A. thaliana is associated with plant-specific pathways i
78 l growth rate and metabolite accumulation in A. thaliana and P. trichocarpa accessions as the outcome
80 or the existence of supercoiling activity in A. thaliana and that the plant is sensitive to quinolone
81 b in B. napus and their promoter activity in A. thaliana showed differences in the induction of the p
84 Overexpression of both EcGBF3 and AtGBF3 in A. thaliana resulted in improved tolerance to osmotic st
85 ively regulating the expression of AtLRL3 in A. thaliana, LRL genes promote rhizoid development indep
87 at enhanced activation of SA biosynthesis in A. thaliana hybrids may contribute to their increased re
89 ds to the opposite phenotype as described in A. thaliana Mathematical modeling helps to explain how t
90 not sufficient for root hair development in A. thaliana, it suggests that there are differences in t
91 ion for anthocyanin content was dissected in A. thaliana and shown to be affected by a common regulat
92 shaped patterns of methylation diversity in A. thaliana natural populations over evolutionary timesc
94 senic hyperaccumulation can be engineered in A. thaliana by knocking out the HAC1 gene and expressing
95 the active sites of the BBE-like enzymes in A. thaliana suggested that 14 out of 28 members of the f
97 also exhibit parentally biased expression in A. thaliana, suggesting that there is evolutionary conse
100 ific to the suite of glucosinolates found in A. thaliana, with other combinations of glucosinolates b
107 PYK10, the most abundant beta-glucosidase in A. thaliana root ER bodies, hydrolyzes indole glucosinol
109 ough the deamination of guanosine by GSDA in A. thaliana, excluding other possible sources like the d
111 t for reconstituting self-incompatibility in A. thaliana and uncovered an important role for ARC1 in
112 trategy for studying self-incompatibility in A. thaliana, we offer our perspective on what constitute
113 ter cells are able to initiate infections in A. thaliana and in C. elegans albeit, with lower mortali
114 cells are not able to initiate infections in A. thaliana and present significantly reduced virulence
115 and trans-regulation and GxE interactions in A. thaliana, laying the ground for mechanistic investiga
117 these, LATE ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL, is known in A. thaliana to regulate many stress-response genes that
118 found most trichome mutant classes known in A. thaliana We identified orthologous genes of the relev
121 ily through gene duplication and was lost in A. thaliana, contributing to leaf simplification in this
122 f biased transmission of genetic material in A. thaliana, and serve as a springboard for future studi
129 nd characterization of genes and pathways in A. thaliana responsible for hybrid lethality in the A. t
130 a new model for ground tissue patterning in A. thaliana in which the ability to form a functional en
132 and stable self-incompatibility phenotype in A. thaliana and how this should be investigated and repo
134 odel suggest that the R gene polymorphism in A. thaliana may not be maintained through a tightly coup
135 ervation that the ACR2 arsenate reductase in A. thaliana plays no detectable role in arsenic metaboli
136 pparent species-wide (nonhost) resistance in A. thaliana is due to natural pyramiding of multiple Res
139 d maintenance of robust circadian rhythms in A. thaliana, demonstrating that metabolism has a crucial
141 pendent and -independent PTI against RKNs in A. thaliana, suggesting the existence of diverse nematod
142 Our results show increased sensitivity in A. thaliana when using the PAREameters inferred criteria
143 BBX32 (AtBBX32) represses light signaling in A. thaliana and that expression of AtBBX32 in soybean in
144 e SHR proteins function as mobile signals in A. thaliana and all of the SHR homologs physically inter
145 o required for variant-specific silencing in A. thaliana, but SUVH5 [SU(VAR)3-9 HOMOLOG 5] and SUVH6,
146 as the main transformation pathway of SMX in A. thaliana plants, with N(4)-glycosyl-SMX accounting fo
149 at LuTFL1 is a functional homolog of TFL1 in A. thaliana capable of changing both flowering time and
151 corolla tube expresses several genes that in A. thaliana are associated with the distal petal region.
152 expressed at low levels relative to that in A. thaliana, which is associated with hypermethylation o
154 le of GBF3 in imparting drought tolerance in A. thaliana and indicate the conserved role of this gene
155 erance and root-to-shoot As translocation in A. thaliana, with PvACR3 being localized to the plasma m
160 expression of a cytosolic HMGL35 version in A. thaliana delays germination and leads to rapid wiltin
161 i primarily tracked dawn or dusk, whereas in A. thaliana, a wider range of responses were observed, c
162 as been studied in several species including A. thaliana, tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), N. benthamiana
164 also significantly reduced in virus infected A. thaliana by 19.6% but not in N. tabacum or the resist
166 validate the implication of these genes into A. thaliana growth, six of them were further studied by
168 and high methylation variability across many A. thaliana strains at that site are the strongest predi
169 S. cerevisiae, H. sapiens, D. melanogaster, A. thaliana, and E. coli, and confirm significant and co
170 d by distinct NLR-encoding genes in multiple A. thaliana accessions provides species-wide resistance
172 Plants engineered to coexpress a mutated A. thaliana iron transporter (IRT1) and A. thaliana ferr
174 eraction in a background in which the native A. thaliana CENH3 is replaced with CENH3s from distant s
175 An analogous phenomenon occurs in nonhybrid A. thaliana, in which specific classes of rRNA gene vari
181 ional modeling and spectroscopic analyses of A. thaliana GrxS14-BolA1 holo-heterodimer (BolA_H), we p
182 r controlled environmental conditions and of A. thaliana and C. hirsuta in two natural habitats.
193 current knowledge of the natural history of A. thaliana from the perspective of the most closely rel
195 ed sequence variation in the complete IGS of A. thaliana WT plants and provide the reference/consensu
201 e metabolite profiling utilizing a number of A. thaliana relatives within Brassicaceae identified a c
202 ed haplotypes in the worldwide population of A. thaliana Moreover, we found 105 single-copy genes, wh
204 cation), and gene expression (by RT-qPCR) of A. thaliana orthologue genes were performed across diffe
207 ed from self-incompatible close relatives of A. thaliana restore robust SI in several accessions that
210 tic architecture of quantitative response of A. thaliana to a naturally occurring virus in a field en
211 nhibition of self pollen or for reversion of A. thaliana to its fully self-incompatible ancestral sta
212 he conserved correlations point to a role of A. thaliana REIL proteins in the maturation of the eukar
215 esent multiple data to show that the size of A. thaliana OEP80 is smaller than previously estimated.
216 different fields of research in the study of A. thaliana has made a large contribution to our molecul
219 In this study, we modified the cell wall of A. thaliana by targeting the starch-binding domains of A
220 upon outcrossing, show a binding pattern on A. thaliana centromere repeats that is indistinguishable
225 allopolyploid as in the maternal progenitor A. thaliana and significantly more expressed than in the
226 identified orthologous genes of the relevant A. thaliana genes by sequence similarity and synteny and
227 sion/purification of the quinolone-resistant A. thaliana gyrase yields active enzyme that is resistan
229 The present study identified a family of six A. thaliana genes that share five limited regions of seq
231 japonicus plus two reference plant species, A. thaliana and Populus trichocarpa, with annotations ba
232 tionship among four closely related species, A. thaliana, A. lyrata, Capsella rubella and Brassica ra
233 f ARC1 in reconstructing a strong and stable A. thaliana self-incompatibility phenotype, in the conte
235 two-hybrid analyses showed that 4E02 targets A. thaliana vacuolar papain-like cysteine protease (PLCP
238 -ray scattering solution studies reveal that A. thaliana meso-diaminopimelate decarboxylase adopts a
240 wild-type Arabidopsis thaliana We show that A. thaliana CENH3-containing nucleosomes exhibit a stron
241 hese experiments now show unequivocally that A. thaliana encodes an organelle-targeted DNA gyrase tha
244 dopsis thaliana and Arabidopsis arenosa, the A. thaliana-derived rRNA genes are selectively silenced.
245 functional KOR1 G429R mutant encoded by the A. thaliana rsw2-1 allele displayed only oligomannosidic
248 hat of the 12 predicted GGPPS encoded in the A. thaliana genome 10 are functional proteins that can s
251 An analysis of all known sequences in the A. thaliana kinome found that alphaC helix disorder may
252 ive walls comparable to that observed in the A. thaliana ms2 mutant, and extremely compromised germin
254 chloromethane dehalogenase cmuA gene in the A. thaliana phyllosphere correlated with HOL1 genotype,
255 underlying stem-cell niche patterning in the A. thaliana root in terms of some of the key dynamic tra
258 have simple leaves, whereas others like the A. thaliana relative Cardamine hirsuta bear complex leav
263 ock-outs of a putative moss homologue of the A. thaliana MS2 gene, which is highly expressed in the m
266 We demonstrate that the complexity of the A. thaliana transcriptomes has been substantially under-
269 was not required for the E. coli YidC or the A. thaliana Alb3 to functionally complement the E. coli
271 r iron-mobilizing coumarins in sculpting the A. thaliana root bacterial community by inhibiting the p
272 or the DNA repair factor DDB2 in shaping the A. thaliana DNA methylation landscape in the absence of
274 to or less than 5 % and are specific to the A. thaliana lineage; thus, they predictably represent so
275 ot possible at that time to show whether the A. thaliana genes encoded an active gyrase enzyme, nor w
278 wisted "S"-shaped conformation when bound to A. thaliana AHAS (AtAHAS) with the pyrimidinyl group ins
279 ong the phylogenetic lineage from cassava to A. thaliana, suggests that alterations in the electrogen
286 ddition, a decrease in the expression of two A. thaliana Expansin genes (AtEXP5 and AtEXP8) was obser
291 Future work could incorporate FISH utilizing A. thaliana mapped BAC clones to allow the chromosomes o
292 a limited number of experimentally validated A. thaliana interactions and were adapted to fit these s
293 cible xylan xylosyltransferase activity with A. thaliana IRX10 and with a homolog from the dicot plan
294 846 have conserved genomic arrangements with A. thaliana and candidate target jacalins, similar prima
295 in vernalization response is associated with A. thaliana accessions collected from different geograph
297 dual RFO amounts, positively correlated with A. thaliana seed vigor, to which stachyose and verbascos
300 variation in miRNAs and their targets within A. thaliana, and between A. thaliana, A. lyrata and C. r