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1 F, an S-locus F-box gene of Petunia inflata (Solanaceae).
2 -cherry), a member of the nightshade family (Solanaceae).
3 ts: Solanum dulcamara and Solanum rostratum (Solanaceae).
4 alpighiales (Erythroxylaceae) and Solanales (Solanaceae).
5 formance on a novel host, Physalis angulata (Solanaceae).
6 plant families (Asteraceae, Brassicaceae and Solanaceae).
7 h (tolerance) traits in Solanum carolinense (Solanaceae).
8 solanums) of the species-rich genus Solanum (Solanaceae).
9  play a role in MITE siRNA generation in the Solanaceae.
10 cies within the Cucurbitaceae, Fabaceae, and Solanaceae.
11 its loss is irreversible in the plant family Solanaceae.
12 psicum and Lycopersicon, both members of the Solanaceae.
13 ry mechanism for chromosome evolution in the Solanaceae.
14 ent that occurred prior to speciation of the Solanaceae.
15  homologues of the tomato kinases from other Solanaceae.
16 he two Rosaceae species as compared with the Solanaceae.
17 sylgalactosides are conserved throughout the Solanaceae.
18 ngerminated and germinated seeds, except for Solanaceae.
19 dium chain acylsugar accumulation across the Solanaceae.
20 es in controlling chlorophyll content in the Solanaceae.
21 es in potato, tomato, and other crops of the Solanaceae.
22 echanisms driving acylsugar evolution in the Solanaceae.
23 ive barriers (IRBs) are related to SI in the Solanaceae.
24 nctional homologs of systemin outside of the Solanaceae.
25 site of tropane alkaloid biosynthesis in the Solanaceae.
26 r gene regulation and pathogen resistance in Solanaceae.
27 on is conserved from the Brassicaceae to the Solanaceae.
28 mportant tropane alkaloids in species of the Solanaceae.
29 LAP-A) are expressed only in a subset of the Solanaceae.
30 ction and evolution of miR4376 in the family Solanaceae.
31               Both the miR2275-triggered and Solanaceae 24-nt phasiRNAs are enriched in meiotic stage
32 tched its specificity from non-Solanaceae to Solanaceae activase activation.
33 nach and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii), and non-Solanaceae activase fails to activate Solanaceae Rubisco
34 tology encompass terms relevant to Fabaceae, Solanaceae, additional cereal crops, and poplar (Populus
35 anacea fell into the three clades within the Solanaceae already identified for the genus.
36 ed by an as yet unidentified receptor in the Solanaceae, although it has an FLS2-dependent virulence
37 fied taxonomically as Nicotiana benthamiana (Solanaceae), an accession of which, typically referred t
38    Gametophytic SI is well characterized for Solanaceae and although balancing selection is hypothesi
39 um pox virus and turnip mosaic virus in both Solanaceae and Brassicaceae systems, demonstrating poten
40 ulators of cell death and defense across the Solanaceae and Brassicaceae.
41 ch occupy a key evolutionary position in the Solanaceae and capture understudied variation in traits
42 ncestral Rubiscos of the (nightshade) family Solanaceae and characterized their kinetics after coexpr
43 y root disease (HRD) on hydroponically grown Solanaceae and Cucurbitaceae crops, besides being widely
44 eudicot families including the Brassicaceae, Solanaceae and Fabaceae, our work in eudicots supports a
45 g plants from three species of two families, Solanaceae and Fabaceae, results in the accumulation of
46        Our data are a major resource for the Solanaceae and fill a void in studies of TF families acr
47  study of gene expression in tobacco and the Solanaceae and helps to fill a current gap in studies of
48  to extensive trait and phylogenetic data in Solanaceae and investigate how speciation and extinction
49     Utilizing a whole-genome phylogeny of 92 Solanaceae and its sister clade species, we employ an ev
50  a common feature of genome evolution in the Solanaceae and other plant families.
51 nfant diet and they can be contaminated with Solanaceae and other plants containing tropane alkaloids
52 ncompatibility responses, such as S-RNase in Solanaceae and PrsS-PrpS in Papaveraceae, as well as the
53 ology between Sly-miR4376, a miRNA common to Solanaceae and reported to target autoinhibited Ca(2+) -
54 ll separated from the S-RNase sequences from Solanaceae and Rosaceae, and also from most known "S-lik
55 hat gave rise to the core euasterid families Solanaceae and Rubiaceae had a basic chromosome number o
56 ontaining biological data for species in the Solanaceae and their close relatives, with data types ra
57 es at the self-incompatibility locus ( S) of Solanaceae and their extraordinary spectrum of sequence
58 ing across the plant families tomato (family Solanaceae) and coffee (family Rubiaceae).
59 aena odorata (Asteraceae) Datura stramonium (Solanaceae), and Xanthium strumarium (Asteraceae), compa
60 s also functional in a family other than the Solanaceae, and could be considered for canker control.
61 lucosinolates in Brassicaceae, acylsugars in Solanaceae, and flavour compounds in apple, indicate tha
62 s tested, even including some members of the Solanaceae, and it is therefore unlikely that Chi2;1 is
63 latory pairs and R-type defense genes in the Solanaceae, and provided a genomic basis for the lack of
64 patibility RNases from the Scrophulariaceae, Solanaceae, and Rosaceae.
65 hree flowering plant families, including the Solanaceae, and this self/non-self recognition mechanism
66     We show that diversification patterns in Solanaceae are better explained by breeding system and a
67        In contrast, tropane alkaloids in the Solanaceae are biosynthesized in the roots and transloca
68 ily, termed TNACS, appears restricted to the Solanaceae, as they are absent from currently sequenced
69 novel Ascomycete PAMP, RcCDI1, recognized by Solanaceae but not by monocots, which activates cell dea
70 ibited PAMP activity, inducing cell death in Solanaceae but not in other families of dicots or monoco
71 emin regulates antiherbivore defenses in the Solanaceae, but in other plant families, peptides with a
72 e trend strengthened when we weighted edible Solanaceae by nicotine concentration (ptrend = 0.004).
73  capable of inducing alkalinization in other Solanaceae cell types (or species), indicating that stru
74  complements of the key founders of the main Solanaceae clades and the rearrangements that led to the
75 ing fruit ripening is conserved in different Solanaceae clades, and that climacteric fruit ripening i
76 ly associated with consumption of all edible Solanaceae combined (relative risk [RR] = 0.81, 95% conf
77 ealed that transgenic expression of AtEFR in Solanaceae confers elf18 responsiveness and broad-spectr
78 er of genes in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum; Solanaceae) contains genes for terpene synthases (TPSs)
79 spectrum resistance when introduced into the Solanaceae crop tomato.
80 ) -mediated response in tomato and two other Solanaceae crops is distinct from that in Arabidopsis th
81 ) -mediated response in tomato and two other Solanaceae crops is distinct from that in Arabidopsis th
82  steroidal glycoalkaloids (SGAs) produced in Solanaceae crops, including tomato, are antinutritional
83 ) soil effectively protects tomato and other Solanaceae crops, pepper (Capsicum annuum) and eggplant
84 grasses, crucifers, legumes, some trees, and Solanaceae crops.
85 e breeders to increase the salt tolerance of Solanaceae cultivars.
86 ely related to a tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum; Solanaceae) diterpene synthase encoding Z-abienol syntha
87 has been previously reported, the N-terminal Solanaceae domain (SD) of Sw-5b also interacts with NSm
88 tended N-terminal sequences previously named Solanaceae Domain.
89 shared with most Eudicots, and a more recent Solanaceae event that is shared with tomato and other so
90 nt the Brassicaceae, Fabaceae, Gramineae and Solanaceae families.
91 Cucurbitaceae, and recently the Fabaceae and Solanaceae families.
92                               Members of the Solanaceae family accumulate phenylpropanoid-polyamine c
93 clade of dicotyledonous plants, to which the Solanaceae family also belongs.
94 ynthesized in the glandular trichomes of the Solanaceae family and are implicated in protection again
95  phenotypic data, and analysis tools for the Solanaceae family and close relatives.
96 l hundreds of acylsugars produced across the Solanaceae family and even within a single plant, built
97 ly evolved before the diversification of the Solanaceae family and underwent lineage-specific diversi
98 ted to AtRTE1, we report that members of the Solanaceae family contain two phylogenetically distinct
99                                          The Solanaceae family contains a number of important crop sp
100                           The highly diverse Solanaceae family contains several widely studied models
101 Petunia, and not in the other species of the Solanaceae family examined.
102                                          The Solanaceae family has been used as a model to study the
103                Thus different species in the Solanaceae family have evolved distinct recognition mech
104                                          The Solanaceae family includes commercially important vegeta
105 hole genome data for an increasing number of Solanaceae family members including tomato, potato, pepp
106 ME8) cytochrome P450 hydroxylases across the Solanaceae family revealed two distinct clades producing
107                                  In Petunia (Solanaceae family), self-incompatibility (SI) is regulat
108 ypSys gene family to be found outside of the Solanaceae family, and its encoded peptide precursor is
109 titute the largest monophyletic group in the Solanaceae family, but a high-quality genome assembly fr
110 ion in fruit morphology among members of the Solanaceae family, fine-tuning regulation of gene expres
111 lanum rostratum Dunal), which belongs to the Solanaceae family, is a worldwide noxious invasive weed
112 f adaptation and phenotypic diversity in the Solanaceae family, other species in the Asterid clade su
113 pepper (Capsicum annuum), all members of the Solanaceae family, using reverse-transcription polymeras
114 g comparative resource for the plants of the Solanaceae family, which includes important crop and mod
115 erated, we investigated the evolution of the Solanaceae family-specific, trichome-localized acylsugar
116 sterids and Amaranthaceae, far predating the Solanaceae family.
117 known class I basic chitinase genes from the Solanaceae family.
118 o, potato, and Petunia, all belonging to the Solanaceae family.
119 otato, members of the economically important Solanaceae family.
120 velopment in tomato and other species of the Solanaceae family.
121 served in most species except the members of Solanaceae family.
122 er, chilli and aubergine, all members of the Solanaceae family.
123  in glandular trichomes of plants across the Solanaceae family.
124 ice for fleshy fruit development and for the Solanaceae family.
125  in the glandular trichomes of plants in the Solanaceae family.
126                This family, designated SoFT (Solanaceae Foldback Transposon), exhibit striking struct
127  the hummingbird-pollinated Petunia exserta (Solanaceae) from a colorless ancestor.
128 ty (SI) for a population of Lycium parishii (Solanaceae) from Organ Pipe National Monument, Arizona.
129 ene fossil berries of the nightshade family (Solanaceae) from the Esmeraldas Formation in Colombia an
130 -MiS22) and found abundant MiS insertions in Solanaceae genomic DNA and expressed sequence tags (EST)
131                  PFGD is integrated with the Solanaceae Genomics Database to help provide insight int
132                                              Solanaceae glandular trichomes produce defensive acylsug
133 he results suggest that domestication of the Solanaceae has been driven by mutations in a very limite
134  gender dimorphism in North American Lycium (Solanaceae) has evolved in polyploid, self-compatible ta
135 uctive barriers between even closely related Solanaceae have precluded a genetic dissection, we captu
136 omato species (Solanum section Lycopersicon (Solanaceae)) have been described as polymorphic for mati
137                        The nightshade family Solanaceae holds exceptional economic and cultural impor
138 role in controlling fruit development in the Solanaceae in a fruit-specific manner.
139 sized in the roots of specific genera of the Solanaceae in a multistep pathway that is only partially
140 olanum lycopersicum) is a model organism for Solanaceae in both molecular and agronomic research.
141 gene duplicate function have occurred in the Solanaceae, in that individual gene roles are distinct,
142 d portions of the plant in contrast with the Solanaceae, in which tropane alkaloid biosynthesis occur
143 me sequencing of PacBio for 18 accessions in Solanaceae, including 15 accessions of five wild tomato
144              Thus, evolutionary diversity in Solanaceae inflorescence complexity is determined by sub
145           In tomato and related nightshades (Solanaceae), inflorescences range from solitary flowers
146 nfirming that the diploid gene number in the Solanaceae is around 35,000.
147 c self-incompatibility (SI) possessed by the Solanaceae is controlled by a highly polymorphic locus c
148  that TA biosynthesis in Erythroxylaceae and Solanaceae is polyphyletic and that independent recruitm
149 rd distinct type of cyclotide precursor, and Solanaceae is the fourth phylogenetically disparate plan
150                 The early diversification of Solanaceae is thought to have occurred in South America
151                      Physalis minima (family Solanaceae) is a native East Malaysia plant which is clo
152                      Solanum paniculatum L. (Solanaceae) is a plant species widespread throughout tro
153                  Potato (Solanum sp., family Solanaceae) is the most important noncereal food crop gl
154 ed genera Cestrum, Vestia and Sessea (family Solanaceae) lack known plant telomeric sequences.
155  The potentially protective effect of edible Solanaceae largely occurred in men and women who had nev
156    We identified 22 families of MITEs in the Solanaceae (MiS1-MiS22) and found abundant MiS insertion
157                                      Several Solanaceae MITEs generate genome changes that potentiall
158 urces and findings elevate Physalis to a new Solanaceae model system and establish a paradigm in the
159 rescences of tomato and related nightshades (Solanaceae), new lateral inflorescence branches develop
160 f the mtDNA of a repeated cybrid between the solanaceae Nicotiana tabacum and Hyoscyamus niger.
161 mal glandular secreting trichomes across the Solanaceae (nightshade) family is ideal for investigatin
162     Across a phylogeny of 56 wild species of Solanaceae (nightshades), we show here that the repeated
163                              Here, we enable Solanaceae NLR gene function in rice, soybean, and Arabi
164                                         Many Solanaceae NLRs require NRC (NLR-Required for Cell death
165 nces obtained by RT-PCR from five species of Solanaceae now reveal a picture of conspicuous inter-spe
166 common evolutionary pathway to polyploidy in Solanaceae occurs via direct breakdown of self-incompati
167 bacco (Nicotiana tabacum) is a member of the Solanaceae, one of the agronomically most important grou
168 is of TFs has been made from a member of the Solanaceae, one of the most important families of vascul
169 ly prior to or after the radiation of either Solanaceae or Rubiaceae as has been recently suggested.
170  alanine, which is not present in either non-Solanaceae or Solanaceae Rubisco.
171         This result suggests that genomes in Solanaceae, or at least in Solanum, are evolving at a mo
172  from petunia of the agronomically important Solanaceae plant family.
173 gth regulator alone in groundcherry, another Solanaceae plant, also enabled engineering to a compact
174  tobacco) fails to activate Rubisco from non-Solanaceae plants (e.g. spinach and Chlamydomonas reinha
175                                Activase from Solanaceae plants (e.g. tobacco) fails to activate Rubis
176 tritional steroidal glycoalkaloids (SGAs) in Solanaceae plants have provided deep insights into their
177 nder low light-induced abscission in diverse Solanaceae plants.
178                               Members of the Solanaceae possess duplicate copies of these genes, allo
179 mato plants and many of its relatives in the Solanaceae produce a mixture of O-acyl sugars that contr
180 lanum lycopersicum) and other species in the Solanaceae produce and secrete a mixture of O-acylsugars
181 sicum) and many other species throughout the Solanaceae produce and secrete mixtures of sugar esters
182 mes of many plants in the nightshade family (Solanaceae) produce O-acylsugars, and in cultivated and
183                  Recently, the International Solanaceae Project (SOL) was formed as an umbrella organ
184 ge subunit of Rubisco that are unique to the Solanaceae proteins.
185 functions with multiple sensor NLRs within a Solanaceae receptor network.
186 te 2006, interest and participation from the Solanaceae research community has been strong and growin
187 ) was formed as an umbrella organization for Solanaceae research in over 30 countries to address impo
188 air of congeners from each of five genera in Solanaceae reveals extensive transgeneric evolution of L
189             Self-incompatibility (SI) in the Solanaceae, Rosaceae and Scrophulariaceae is controlled
190                                       In the Solanaceae, Rosaceae and Scrophulariaceae, two separate
191                            In species of the Solanaceae, Rosaceae, and Scrophulariaceae, the inhibiti
192 rejection in self-incompatible plants of the Solanaceae, Rosaceae, and Scrophulariaceae.
193 dings from various plant families, including Solanaceae, Rosaceae, Papaveraceae, and Brassicaceae, an
194 nd non-Solanaceae activase fails to activate Solanaceae Rubisco.
195 h is not present in either non-Solanaceae or Solanaceae Rubisco.
196 persicum) model system Micro-Tom (MT) by the Solanaceae (S)-biotype of Moniliophthora perniciosa, whi
197 tly related families of flowering plants-the Solanaceae, Scrophulariaceae, and Rosaceae.
198                New plant databases cover the Solanaceae (SolR) and Asteraceae (AMIR) families while a
199 neralist Trichoplusia ni and the facultative Solanaceae-specialist Manduca sexta, was significantly i
200  notable differences between tobacco and non-Solanaceae species in TF family size and evidence for bo
201 mal solitary flowers resembling those of the Solanaceae species petunia and tobacco.
202 s that is recognized by Rpi-amr3 from a wild Solanaceae species Solanum americanum.
203               While morphologically diverse, Solanaceae species such as potato, tomato, pepper, and e
204  the whole-genome triplication identified in Solanaceae species such as tomato, the genome includes s
205                                           In Solanaceae species, 24-nt phasiRNAs were observed, but t
206 SGN currently houses map and marker data for Solanaceae species, a large expressed sequence tag colle
207 ly from Fabaceae, Brassicaceae, Poaceae, and Solanaceae species, but also from representatives of oth
208 se/oxygenase (Rubisco, EC 4.1.1.39) from non-Solanaceae species, including the green alga Chlamydomon
209 /miR172 regulatory circuit in a heterologous Solanaceae species, Nicotiana benthamiana.
210                         In tobacco and other Solanaceae species, the tobacco N gene confers resistanc
211 iRNA and two 21-nt miRNA families from three Solanaceae species-tobacco, tomato, and potato.
212 owever, that in the nightshade plant family (Solanaceae), species with functional self-incompatibilit
213 hich half the annotated NLRs were targets of Solanaceae-specific and conserved miRNAs, at the NB subd
214 in genes in various eudicots show that three Solanaceae-specific CUL1 genes share a common origin, wi
215                                          The Solanaceae-specific miR6024 and its NLR targets analysed
216 lutionarily conserved sORFs, we uncovered 96 Solanaceae-specific sORFs, revealing the importance of s
217 mily size and evidence for both tobacco- and Solanaceae-specific subfamily expansions.
218 ato and feeds on several wild species in the Solanaceae, such as S. eleagnifolium and S. rostratum Du
219 ited resistance in both the Brassicaceae and Solanaceae suggests that this trait may be more widely d
220 reductase in yeast engineered to express the Solanaceae TA pathway enables the production of a hybrid
221 pecies - Jaltomata sinuosa and J. umbellata (Solanaceae) - that have divergent suites of floral trait
222 hat allow plants to avoid inbreeding--in the Solanaceae (the nightshade family) is controlled by a po
223 umbers fall within the range observed in the Solanaceae, the only other family with RNase-based incom
224                         In self-incompatible Solanaceae, the pistil protein S-RNase contributes to S-
225                                           In Solanaceae, the S-specific interaction between the pisti
226                                           In Solanaceae, the self-incompatibility S-RNase and S-locus
227           In self-incompatible plants of the Solanaceae, the specificity of pollen rejection is contr
228  a positional candidate gene approach in the Solanaceae, these genes were genetically mapped in peppe
229 as Rubisco switched its specificity from non-Solanaceae to Solanaceae activase activation.
230 e), Brassicaceae (cabbage and broccoli), and Solanaceae (tomato).
231                                          For Solanaceae type self-incompatibility, discrimination bet
232 predictive of R-gene genomic location in the Solanaceae using the pepper R gene Bs2.
233 ns of red flower color in the tomato family, Solanaceae, using large-scale data mining and new sequen
234 ecedented prospects for SGAs manipulation in Solanaceae via precision breeding strategies.
235 nt genomes, indicating that evolution of the Solanaceae was not associated with the gain or loss of T
236  in the ground cherry, Physalis crassifolia (Solanaceae), was surveyed in a natural population occurr
237 y in the asterid core eudicot genus Petunia (Solanaceae), we carried out global and fine-scale gene e
238 omatillo genus, these findings indicate that Solanaceae were distributed at least from southern South
239 ion of these early Eocene fossils shows that Solanaceae were well diversified long before final Gondw
240 -chaconine) in goji berries (L. barbarum L., Solanaceae) were developed.
241 ter to the well-documented phenomenon in the Solanaceae where SC accompanying polyploidization is fre
242 phosphate synthase, previously only found in Solanaceae, which is likely involved in the biosynthesis
243                            In species of the Solanaceae, which produce compounds such as atropine and
244 es similar biology with other members of the Solanaceae, yet has features unique within the family, s

 
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