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1 (Pectinophora gossypiella), a global pest of cotton.
2 e additional crop improvement strategies for cotton.
3 e to increasing numbers of hemipterans in Bt cotton.
4 is responsible for the major leaf shapes in cotton.
5 h eventually may compromise the future of Bt cotton.
6 we characterize AS in the polyploid species cotton.
7 egy for the management of plant bug pests of cotton.
8 ), is among the most devastating diseases in cotton.
9 hat regulates the drought stress response in cotton.
10 a reference-grade genome assembly for Upland cotton.
11 nate and define the leaf shape of cultivated cotton.
12 (G-LSR2) in Vd991 were less virulent only on cotton.
13 ociated with fibre quality in allotetraploid cotton.
14 lyzed, which was especially pronounced in Bt cotton.
15 COL2 is an epiallele in allotetraploid cottons.
16 a dual domestication processes in tetraploid cottons.
17 uding economically important Upland and Pima cottons.
18 A and GhMYB25-like D, which were encoded by cotton A subgenome and the D subgenome, respectively, wa
19 ci, we sequenced fibre transcriptomes of 251 cotton accessions and identified 15 330 expression quant
20 most morphological and physiological traits, cotton accessions showed highly variable responses to 2
23 ton lineage of an ancestral genome common to cotton and cacao, and proposed evolutionary models to sh
26 olutionary and functional genomic studies in cotton and inform future breeding programs for fiber imp
27 derstanding of the disease and resistance in cotton and may facilitate the development cotton with im
28 ntributed significantly to its adaptation to cotton and may represent a significant mechanism in the
32 he reference-grade assembly of allopolyploid cotton and serve as a general strategy for sequencing ot
33 m Arizona demonstrate that the transgenic Bt cotton and sterile insect releases interacted synergisti
36 non-model plant species (arugula, wheat, and cotton) and resulting in high protein expression levels
37 sub genome anchored physical maps of Upland cotton, and a new-generation approach to the whole-genom
38 pteran Trichoplusia ni (soybean, green bean, cotton, and cabbage) were treated with the biopesticide
40 ich is highly virulent on its original host, cotton, and performed comparisons with the reference gen
41 lter monopodial apices, implying that once a cotton apex is SP-determined, it cannot be reset by flor
44 63 eyes (22%) and divided into 3 categories: cotton ball sign (defined as a fuzzy hyperreflective are
45 l acuity was highest in association with the cotton ball sign and lowest in the acquired vitelliform
47 and domestication history of allotetraploid cottons based on the whole genomic variation between G.
52 er eyelids and sweeping of the fornices with cotton buds, and maintaining clinical suspicion of conta
53 ulted in significantly enhanced virulence on cotton but did not affect virulence on tomato or lettuce
54 d silenced, while COL2D is repressed in wild cottons but highly expressed due to methylation loss in
55 us is not only of agricultural importance in cotton, but through pioneering chimeric and morphometric
56 ns also appears to disrupt NAE metabolism in cotton by inducing overexpression of fatty acid amide hy
60 a systematic investigation, a novel graphene/cotton-carbon cathode is presented here that enables sul
62 deployed a functional genomic screen using a cotton cDNA library in a virus-induced gene silencing (V
64 & White, 1919) Chitwood, 1949 from soybean, cotton, corn and various vegetables (232 samples); M. ha
69 velop and map new CAPS and dCAPS markers for cotton developmental-regulatory genes that are important
72 rise to a multitude of effects, such as the Cotton effect and circularly polarized luminescence, mak
73 ationship between amplitudes of the specific Cotton effect and enantiomeric excess of the parent amin
75 Circular dichroism spectroscopy shows strong Cotton effects (Deltaepsilon = +/-100 M(-1) cm(-1) at 30
76 l skeleton affects the amplitude of observed Cotton effects and stability of the trityl carbocations.
77 In the neutral environment, the most intense Cotton effects are observed for ortho-substituted deriva
79 table carbocations, only two exhibit intense Cotton effects in the low energy region at around 450 nm
80 ings", allowed for the generation of exciton Cotton effects in the region of (1)B(b) electronic trans
82 The substrate binding yields characteristic Cotton effects that provide information about the target
83 ly, specific rotations, molar ellipticities, Cotton effects, and anisotropic dissymmetry factors.
84 ds to fabrication of a wearable and flexible cotton electrode with an excellent electrocatalytic acti
85 ollworm moths from airplanes and planting of cotton engineered to produce insecticidal proteins from
86 used to examine hydraulic characteristics of cotton, evaluate their consequences on whole plant perfo
88 species in field crops including soybean and cotton, except for one population of M. haplanaria from
89 NI and CuO nanoparticles were synthesized on cotton fabric through chemical methods to make a new fle
91 s from friable cellulosic fibers in homemade cotton-fabric masks confounded explicit determination of
92 nto surface pre-treated (by inkjet printing) cotton fabrics in order to produce all-inkjet-printed hi
94 uman plasma samples from orchard workers and cotton farmers with long-term exposure to organophosphor
97 the potential regulatory roles of miRNAs in cotton fiber development and the importance of miRNAs in
102 n factor genes are specifically expressed in cotton fiber during different developmental stages, incl
103 n wildtype Xu-142, 26 miRNAs are involved in cotton fiber initiation and 48 miRNAs are related to pri
105 Among 54 miRNAs, 18 miRNAs were involved in cotton fiber initiation and eight miRNAs were related to
106 and distinct supramolecular structure of the cotton fiber provided a favorable environment for the co
118 rating DNA level mutations on allotetraploid cotton genome with high-efficiency and high-specificity.
121 n levels were varied through manipulation of cotton Golgi-related (CGR) 2 or 3 genes encoding two fun
122 (Panax ginseng C.A. Meyer), fiber length in cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L. and G. barbadense L.) and
124 transcriptomes between wild and domesticated cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) and their reciprocal F(1) hy
127 o genotypic variation in hydraulic traits of cotton (Gossypium hirsutum), an economically important s
128 pecies, including wheat (Triticum aestivum), cotton (Gossypium hirsutum), and soybean (Glycine max),
131 Despite having moderate salt-tolerance, cotton (Gossypium spp.) suffers severe yield losses to s
132 nanotubes (CNTs) on fiber-producing species (cotton, Gossypium hirsutum) and ornamental species (vinc
136 efforts eradicated this pest throughout the cotton-growing areas of the continental United States an
138 (Pectinophora gossypiella), a global pest of cotton, have evolved practical resistance to transgenic
144 ns since their famous definition launched by Cotton in 1963, and the area has expanded ever since.
145 iperda is one of the main pests of maize and cotton in Brazil and has increased its occurrence on soy
147 s (higher flower number and leaf number) and cotton (increased fiber biomass) compared to untreated p
149 ing or double cropping is suitable for wheat-cotton intercropping to prevent late or early chilling d
150 ion similarities in fibers of two cultivated cottons, involving coexpression networks and N(6)-methyl
151 e of many agricultural crops, the cultivated cotton is an allotetraploid and has a large genome ( 2.5
156 an virus, Cotton leaf curl Kokhran virus and Cotton leaf curl Alabad virus, several distinct species
159 rst epidemic; Cotton leaf curl Multan virus, Cotton leaf curl Kokhran virus and Cotton leaf curl Alab
160 mbinant begomovirus named Burewala strain of Cotton leaf curl Kokhran virus that lacks a full complem
161 eral distinct species of alphasatellites and cotton leaf curl Multan betasatellite were found associa
164 ruses characterized from the first epidemic; Cotton leaf curl Multan virus, Cotton leaf curl Kokhran
165 Cotton leaf curl disease (CLCuD), caused by cotton leaf curl viruses (CLCuVs), is among the most dev
169 , animals of groups EP and EP-HD100 received cotton ligatures around mandibular first molars (MFM).
170 , animals of groups EP and EP-HN019 received cotton ligatures around mandibular first molars (MFMs).
171 enome of cotton, we made use of a transgenic cotton line previously generated in our laboratory that
172 ches, we revealed a 5x multiplication in the cotton lineage of an ancestral genome common to cotton a
173 In contained field trials, the transgenic cotton lines significantly suppressed the development of
176 tin are resistant to Phenacoccus solenopsis (cotton mealybug), Myzus persicae (green peach aphids) an
178 , which arises from a combination of a large Cotton-Mouton coefficient and relatively high magnetic s
179 es, produced the nondefoliation phenotype on cotton, olive, and okra but complementation of two genes
182 Two fabrics [polyamide (PA) and polyester/cotton (PES/CO)] were selected and coated with perfluoro
189 tion system for the generation of transgenic cotton plants with equal or higher transformation effici
190 ient and simple means to generate transgenic cotton plants, but also helps address many of the concer
194 e evolved practical resistance to transgenic cotton producing Bt toxin Cry2Ab in India, but not in th
197 results provide genomic bases for improving cotton production and for further evolution analysis of
199 SNPs of known genomic location in tetraploid cotton provided unique opportunities to characterize gen
200 ity of these loci to fiber quality and other cotton QTL was demonstrated in two A-subgenome and one D
202 RSV F (PIV5/F) or G (PIV5/G) protein in the cotton rat and African green monkey models for their rep
204 ss if those observations are specific to the cotton rat and to elucidate the mechanism by which vacci
205 r adjuvant) in a preclinical RSV susceptible cotton rat challenge model compared to formaldehyde inac
206 MeV F, this virus infects and replicates in cotton rat lung tissue more efficiently than the wt viru
207 rvations are relevant to the validity of the cotton rat model itself and to safe development of nonli
212 al development over a wide dose range in the cotton rat RSV enhanced-disease model, as suboptimal dos
213 myelination in an otherwise normal host, the cotton rat Sigmodon hispidus For a long time, demyelinat
214 s work, we found that HSV-1 infection of the cotton rat Sigmodon hispidus via a common route (lip abr
217 ir immunogenicity and protective efficacy in cotton rats and African green monkeys, which are among t
219 with DS-Cav1 F VLPs as maternal vaccines in cotton rats and report that UC-3 F VLPs significantly in
220 hortly after demyelination in HSV-1-infected cotton rats but could be incomplete, resulting in "scars
226 Here we report that immunization of pregnant cotton rats, a surrogate model for human maternal immuni
228 ministered intranasally or subcutaneously in cotton rats, the candidates were highly immunogenic and
236 diet assays indicating that other inducible cotton responses are responsible for the found negative
237 ve to commercial Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) cotton, resulting in significant economic losses and an
238 be chosen as regions become drier, and corn, cotton, rice and soybeans are more likely to be selected
240 icular, we find that when temperature rises, cotton, rice, sorghum and winter wheat are more likely t
241 ition) metal-metal linked assemblies, as per Cotton's early denomination, to nonmetal/metal clusters
244 in diploid, allopolyploid, and domesticated cotton shows that despite most DNA methylation being con
246 ree skin flame burn and 48 breaths of cooled cotton smoke inhalation under deep anesthesia and analge
247 genes identified between wild and cultivated cottons, some contribute to domestication traits, includ
251 es representing three of the four cultivated cotton species G. hirsutum, G. barbadense and G. herbace
253 he genetic variation of salt tolerance among cotton species, 17 diverse accessions of allopolyploid (
254 ive analysis of TCP gene family in a diploid cotton species, Gossypium arboreum, including phylogenet
255 d diversification for all five allopolyploid cotton species, including economically important Upland
258 pared with the HZ (around 5 times higher for cotton strips and 1.5 times faster for the tea leaves).
259 ies by deploying two standardized bioassays (cotton strips and two types of commercially available te
260 production, as more than half of the global cotton supply is grown in regions with high water shorta
261 action kinetics for loss of THC on glass and cotton surfaces are consistent with a relatively short l
263 esthesia, 14% used a topical anesthetic with cotton swab compression, 27% used a subconjunctival anes
268 ra is the ancestral leaf shape of tetraploid cotton that gave rise to the okra allele and that normal
270 ates, and microfluidic channels consisted of cotton threads to harvest sweat from the skin surface an
271 icrofluidic device of easy assembly based on cotton threads, low cost materials and measurements by m
272 te, were detected in 50% examined transgenic cotton through PCR amplification assay and sequencing an
275 n combination, on four crop plants (cabbage, cotton, tobacco and tomato) were analyzed, in comparison
277 ate the efficacy of the system in recovering cotton transformants following Agrobacterium-mediated tr
279 has been selected for further development of cotton varieties that could potentially reduce or elimin
281 more, during infection of N. benthamiana and cotton, VdEG1 and VdEG3 acted as PAMPs and virulence fac
284 eterminants conferring salinity tolerance in cotton, we deployed a functional genomic screen using a
285 system to target a gene within the genome of cotton, we made use of a transgenic cotton line previous
286 emically inducible defensive compounds in Bt cotton which might benefit other important cotton herbiv
287 ood sources (bolls/squares) of Bt and non-Bt cotton which were either undamaged, damaged by Bt tolera
290 natural and synthetic materials (i.e. paper, cotton wool and glass wool) previously soaked with a gel
291 ent with a history of symptomatic anemia and cotton wool appearance in retina during ophthalmological
292 t concludes that even though the presence of cotton wool appearance in retina is a nonspecific sign i
293 vice was evaluated, highlighting the role of cotton wool filter for providing a suitable environment
294 a pipette tip, wire electrodes, enzyme, and cotton wool filter, allows the fabrication of a novel el
295 lesions (hemorrhage [H], microaneurysm [ma], cotton wool spot [CWS], intraretinal microvascular abnor
297 iandrosterone was positively associated with cotton wool spots, and serum testosterone response durin
298 including choroidal folds, optic disc edema, cotton-wool spots, globe flattening, and refraction chan
299 arteries, regions of vascular nonperfusion, cotton-wool spots, Kyrieleis plaques, irregular venous c
300 fibre shows only ~1/9 of the impact force of cotton yarn with negligible rebound when used for impact