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1 xpanding leaves (about 3.5-fold less than in pistils).
2 ing specific interactions between pollen and pistil.
3 rabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) pollen and pistil.
4 an effective pollen tube guidance within the pistil.
5 ion involves interactions between pollen and pistil.
6 ecifically, in the transmitting tract of the pistil.
7 oral tissues to access the ovules within the pistil.
8 male gametophyte) that is encased within the pistil.
9 xpressing pollen tubes elongating within the pistil.
10 hat express specificities in common with the pistil.
11 tches either S-allele present in the diploid pistil.
12 re carried in the pollen grain to the female pistil.
13 recise communications between the pollen and pistil.
14 e-specific rejection of "self" pollen by the pistil.
15 is induced in pollen tubes by growth in the pistil.
16 pollinations with Col and RIL pollen on Col pistils.
17 promoters from genes expressed primarily in pistils.
18 and anthers, TsYUC6 in anthers and TsBAHD in pistils.
19 1, GACO2, GACO3) were isolated from geranium pistils.
20 was similarly impaired in both are and VF36 pistils.
21 development, resulting in the persistence of pistils.
22 tically marked Col-0 and RIL pollen on Van-0 pistils.
23 marked Col-0 pollen and Van-0 pollen on RIL pistils.
24 with Col and Landsberg erecta pollen on RIL pistils.
26 loret in each spikelet on the ear includes a pistil abortion process that requires the action of the
28 Binding between NaPCCP and NaSBP1 and the pistil AGPs may contribute to signaling and trafficking
29 ollen tube gene products that respond to the pistil and are required for reproductive success; moreov
30 arch across disciplines, for example, pollen-pistil and graft incompatibility interactions and plant
31 communication between female tissues of the pistil and paternal pollen tubes imposes hybridization b
35 ering plants, pollen grains germinate on the pistil and send pollen tubes down the transmitting tract
36 tion, corolla tube structure, nectar volume, pistil and stamen length) remains poorly understood.
38 otein that is expressed predominantly in the pistils and anthers of Brassica flowers late in flower d
39 moderate levels in leaves, pedicels, sepals, pistils and petals, and at very low levels in roots.
41 n, and nitrogen allocation to female whorls (pistils and sepals) decreased under high density, wherea
42 in floral organ size including elongation of pistils and shortened stamen filaments that resulted in
43 processes (e.g., pollen tube penetration of pistils) and disease progression (e.g., cancer metastasi
44 ated hypocotyls (about 2.5-fold less than in pistils) and in young expanding leaves (about 3.5-fold l
45 ally similar tissues such as leaves, anther, pistil, and embryo, while orthologs that are highly expr
46 carboxylase2 (ODC2) and HT-A/-B genes in the pistil, and farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase2 (FPS2), ui6
47 owth, similar to what normally occurs in the pistil, and this ability correlates with the accumulatio
48 ot density, delayed sepal opening, elongated pistils, and reduced fertility in the primary infloresce
49 TTS) and 120-kDa glycoprotein (120K) are two pistil arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs) that share a cons
50 uidance on extracellular matrices within the pistil are essential processes that convey the pollen tu
51 sms of guidance for pollen tubes through the pistil are not known, the female tissues play a critical
52 len tubes are reduced when NaStEP-suppressed pistils are pollinated with either compatible or incompa
54 ecific antibody first detects the protein in pistils at one day prior to flowering, with higher level
56 control the enhanced style elongation of pro pistils, because its expression was not higher in pro st
57 llen is unilaterally incompatible (UI) on SI pistils but unilaterally compatible (UC) on SC pistils(1
59 LeSTIG1, a small cysteine-rich protein from pistil, can bind the extracellular domains of both LePRK
61 17; Chi2;1) identified by screening a tomato pistil cDNA library has been found to encode a protein s
69 f non-functional S-haplotypes with disrupted pistil component (stylar-S) and/or pollen component (pol
70 t, nonfunctional S-haplotypes with disrupted pistil component (stylar-S) and/or pollen component (pol
72 e with S3-, S5-, S7-, S11-, and S13-carrying pistils, confirming that other SLF proteins are responsi
74 naling between the male (pollen) and female (pistil) counterparts where the interplay between several
75 ollen tube growth assays in vitro and in the pistil demonstrate that hydroxyl free radicals are likel
77 S-locus, which contains S-RNase encoding the pistil determinant and 16-20 S-locus F-box (SLF) genes c
78 y interactions: the S-RNase gene encodes the pistil determinant and the previously unidentified S-gen
84 nts show increased sterility due to abnormal pistil development with about half of the plants develop
85 CO1, and leafy, genes regulating anther and pistil development, and stress-related transcription fac
86 ed expression during certain stages of early pistil development, Cel4 mRNA was also detected at high
87 y pathway and the dual role of SRK in SI and pistil development, our study provides a molecular expla
92 fic genes that respectively suppress female (pistil) development and are necessary for male (anther)
93 hich are normally expressed very late in the pistil developmental pathway and function in the final s
94 efore, it could function in the transport of pistil ECM proteins in the pollen tube endomembrane syst
95 receptor kinase (SRK) gene further enhances pistil elongation and stigma exsertion in this mutant ba
96 are essential for pollen tube elongation in pistil, especially, free Ca(2+) providing a concentratio
97 ection response, the identification of three pistil essential modifier genes unlinked to the S-locus
99 ted predominantly in the stigma and style of pistils excised from open flowers; much lower levels of
100 ic expression of S-linked genes, including a pistil-expressed candidate gene for style length, are ma
101 expressed transmembrane protein, and PrsS, a pistil-expressed secreted protein, interact to trigger a
103 nte crossing barrier1-s haplotype contains a pistil-expressed, potential speciation gene, encoding a
104 TS) protein, 120 kDa glycoprotein (120K) and pistil extensin-like protein III (PELP III) are stylar g
109 ect of pistils on pollen germination and the pistil factors that stimulate pollen germination remain
111 ncoding highly polymorphic pollen (male) and pistil (female) S-determinants that control whether self
113 ordia express TASSELSEED2 RNA but functional pistils found in ear spikelets are protected from cell d
115 mutations in pollen-S that reduce the set of pistils from which the pollen accepts inhibition and dis
116 wing pollination, the upper and lower floret pistils fuse, producing a connated kernel with two genet
120 m pollen tubes to penetrate farther into the pistil in HT suppressed plants, but not to reach the ova
121 PRKs) control pollen tube growth through the pistil in response to extracellular signals, and regulat
122 stamen in ear spikelets and the abortion of pistils in both the tassel spikelets and in the secondar
125 center of spikelets replacing the stamen and pistil, indicating that they synergistically determine s
126 -carboxylic acid (ACC), to the flower or the pistil induced overall deterioration in the entire flowe
128 specific gene ontology classes (e.g., pollen-pistil interaction) in apomicts implies that gene enrich
129 oncurrent developmental timing of the pollen-pistil interaction, suggests these incompatibilities hav
131 MP) mating systems, and characterized pollen-pistil interactions among S. habrochaites populations an
132 The high degree of specificity in pollen-pistil interactions and the precision of directional pol
134 understanding the molecular basis of pollen-pistil interactions as reproductive isolating barriers.
141 ial signal transduction components of pollen-pistil interactions, and isolated two structurally relat
147 e further evaluated mechanisms at the pollen-pistil interface contributing to outcross failure and le
150 imination of self and non-self pollen by the pistil is controlled by a single polymorphic locus, the
151 ation between self and nonself pollen by the pistil is controlled by the highly polymorphic S-RNase g
152 elf recognition mechanism between pollen and pistil is controlled by two polymorphic genes at the S-l
153 elf-/non-self-recognition between pollen and pistil is regulated by the pistil-specific S-RNase gene
154 combination with either HT-A or HT-B in the pistil is sufficient to cause rejection of pollen from a
155 determinants of S-allele specificity in the pistil, it is not known how allele-specific information
157 brary enriched in transcripts present in the pistil late in flower development - potentially encodes
158 the pollen tube nucleus during growth in the pistil leads to pollen tube differentiation required for
160 locus genes, which control anther position, pistil length and pollen size in pin and thrum flowers,
162 long stamen length, short stamen length, and pistil length) in a cosmopolitan sample of 15 ecotypes.
163 of reproductive and immune responses of the pistil makes it a prime system in which to study the con
166 ponents are taken up during growth, and some pistil molecules exert their effect inside the pollen tu
169 c self-incompatibility mechanism enables the pistil of a plant to reject self-pollen and therefore pr
172 s in S. pennellii LA0716 are incompatible on pistils of all tested S. pennellii and some Solanum habr
180 ction often follows the 'SI x SC' rule, i.e. pistils of SI species reject the pollen of SC (self-comp
182 ible (SC) red-fruited species is rejected on pistils of the predominantly self-incompatible (SI) gree
186 ary analysis of mutations that affect either pistil or pollen specificity indicates that natural sele
187 on typically favored increased allocation to pistils (or stamens) but decreased allocation to other w
188 s exhibit normal growth and guidance in pop2 pistils, perhaps by degrading excess GABA and sharpening
199 rmination by restricting the function of the pistil-protecting factor, silkless1, from the apical inf
201 use specific interactions between pollen and pistil proteins as "self" recognition and/or rejection m
203 ences between male pollen release and female pistil receptivity (dichogamy), and self-pollen rejectio
204 nia possesses self-incompatibility, by which pistils reject self-pollen but accept non-self-pollen fo
205 intra-specific reproductive barrier by which pistils reject self-pollen to prevent inbreeding and acc
209 PrpS is a single-copy gene linked to the pistil S gene (currently called S, but referred to herea
210 patible) pollen by interaction of pollen and pistil S locus components, and is subsequently inhibited
213 r rhoeas), interaction of cognate pollen and pistil S-determinants triggers programmed cell death (PC
215 ceae, the S-specific interaction between the pistil S-RNase and the pollen S-Locus F-box protein cont
216 The protein products of S alleles in the pistil, S proteins, were initially identified based on t
217 ms, roots, and cotyledons) and reproductive (pistils, sepals, petals, stamens, and floral buds) organ
221 roteins S-RNase and HT protein function in a pistil-side IRB that causes rejection of pollen from sel
226 the polymorphic S-locus, which contains the pistil-specific S-RNase and multiple pollen-specific S-L
227 etween pollen and pistil is regulated by the pistil-specific S-RNase gene and by multiple pollen-spec
228 s a gene encoding an S-RNase, which controls pistil specificity, and multiple S-locus F-box (SLF) gen
229 ty in Petunia inflata; the S-RNase regulates pistil specificity, and multiple S-locus F-box (SLF) gen
234 enhance reproductive defects in lre-5/lre-5 pistils, suggesting that LLG1 function is not redundant
236 we purified an additional molecule from the pistil that enhances pollen tube adhesion when combined
239 type pollen was used to pollinate the mutant pistil, the pollinated 28-5 silique became >10% longer a
240 fication of the pollen tube cell wall by the pistil, then, is likely a key mechanism for pollen rejec
242 ems and roots) as well as in floral tissues (pistil tips, developing anthers and sepal vasculature).
246 e a pollen tube, which elongates through the pistil to deliver sperm cells to female gametes for doub
247 tube which embarks on a long journey in the pistil to deliver them to the female gametophyte for fer
249 ompatibility (SI), which allows cells of the pistil to recognize and specifically inhibit "self" poll
253 es that ovules are regularly arranged in the pistils to reduce competition for nutrients and space.
256 ch allows the female reproductive organ, the pistil, to distinguish between self pollen and non-self
257 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in the pistil transcriptomes of Arabidopsis thaliana and Arabid
258 of the angiosperms, pollen tubes grow in the pistil transmitting tract (TT) and are guided to the ovu
261 Phosphorus allocation decreased by half in pistils under drought, while stamen phosphorus was unaff
263 uring cooler hours with increased pollen and pistil viability will overcome heat stress-induced damag
266 mosaic virus 35S, and protein levels in the pistil were examined as well as the pollination process.
267 elf-compatible and self-incompatible apricot pistils were created using liquid chromatography coupled
268 ntrast to its non-expression in unpollinated pistils, where expression decreased after anthesis.
269 st number of DEGs was identified in infected pistils, where genes encoding regulators of cell divisio
270 he transcription of DL in stamen and SPW1 in pistil, which is crucial for sexual organ origination in
271 tubes through the transmitting tract of the pistil, which represents the longest segment of its grow
272 ID1: GID1A is expressed throughout the whole pistil, while GID1B is expressed in ovules, and GID1C is