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1 nt in many angiosperms during genesis of the carpel.
2 ate stigmatic crests are conspicuous on each carpel.
3 ns for ideas on the origin of the angiosperm carpel.
4 plants is the female reproductive organ, the carpel.
5 egg cells are buried within the ovary of the carpel.
6 edundantly with other factors in stamens and carpels.
7 meristems, and within developing stamens and carpels.
8 tem to be maintained after the production of carpels.
9 vity and promotes development of stamens and carpels.
10 ation of petals into sepals and stamens into carpels.
11 ng the homeotic conversion of lodicules into carpels.
12 nversions of petals to sepals and stamens to carpels.
13 l sepal-petal-stamens and fourth whorl sepal-carpels.
14 ), a gene that specifies abaxial identity in carpels.
15 ers consisting almost entirely of sepals and carpels.
16 irects leaf development towards formation of carpels.
17 uired for development of petals, stamens and carpels.
18 from a gynoecium that consists of two fused carpels.
19 per serrations, serrated petals and deformed carpels.
20 apacity to make branches and result in extra carpels.
21 ally to ensure proper differentiation of the carpels.
22 orls of stamens, and an indefinite number of carpels.
23 uced organs in place of petals, stamens, and carpels.
24 ivity also results in an increased number of carpels.
25 the formation of specific tissues in ectopic carpels.
26 e fourth (innermost) whorl is made up of two carpels.
27 gions produced flowers with more stamens and carpels.
28 ttern of 5 sepals, 5 petals 5 stamens, and 2 carpels.
29 rs have 4 sepals, 4 petals, 6 stamens, and 2 carpels.
30 3 double mutants have completely derepressed carpels.
31 adds robustness to the apical fusion of the carpels.
32 nd more than five spirally arranged separate carpels.
33 organs in inner whorls and complete loss of carpels.
34 hibit supernumerary stamens but usually lack carpels.
35 hundreds of individual apocarpous (unfused) carpels.
36 sions of petals into sepals and stamens into carpels.
37 stamens and staminodia were transformed into carpels.
38 nt in anthers and pollen tube passage in the carpels.
39 ls, and a perianth distinct from stamens and carpels.
40 e MADS-box gene, resulted in more petals and carpels.
41 three whorls of sepals surrounding abnormal carpels.
42 produces flowers comprising only sepals and carpels.
43 nto female gametophyte-bearing organs termed carpels.
47 show that all VRS genes repress fertility at carpel and awn emergence in developing lateral spikelets
53 rm radiations are identified: (i) the closed carpel and showy radially symmetrical flower, (ii) the b
54 a new function in the differentiation of the carpel and the control of seed size, acting downstream o
55 ING TRACT (NTT), which play pivotal roles in carpel and transmitting tract development, are downregul
57 that bnq3 mutants have pale-green sepals and carpels and decreased chlorophyll levels, suggesting tha
58 hat has homeotic conversions of stamens into carpels and lodicules into palea/lemma-like structures.
61 s did show cell abnormalities in stamens and carpels and produced extremely small fruit-like organs d
66 ired for abaxial identity in both leaves and carpels, and encodes a nuclear-localized protein in the
67 between stamens and staminodes compared with carpels, and provide insight into the process of FMT, wh
71 hich homeotic transformations from sepals to carpels are found in flowers derived from old terminatin
73 ering plants, the sexual organs (stamens and carpels) are composed almost entirely of somatic cells,
76 ith one additional petal, sepal, stamen, and carpel at each of the four whorls, respectively, thus un
77 nd found to be a ridge with the fourth whorl carpels at the summit and the first whorl transverse sep
79 are required to specify petals, stamens, and carpels because these organs are converted into sepals i
80 ressed early in floral development, controls carpel cell number, and has a sequence suggesting struct
82 ies were particularly enhanced in the warmer carpels compared with stamens during the cold night befo
83 grains that contain male gametes, while the carpels contain the ovules that when fertilized will pro
85 lopment, C-genes are required for stamen and carpel development and floral determinacy, and D-genes w
86 he expression of different genes involved in carpel development and phytohormonal pathways regulation
89 form crucial functions specifying stamen and carpel development in the flower and controlling late fr
90 (Ts6) and tasselseed4 (ts4) mutations permit carpel development in the tassel while increasing merist
91 ts shown here of light quality perception on carpel development lead us to speculate on the potential
92 t the phenotype is either independent of the carpel development program or that fdh-1 mutations activ
93 is provided by the restoration of wild-type carpel development to spt mutants by low red/far-red lig
94 terized rice gene that specifically controls carpel development under heat stress, ensuring plant fem
95 vules suggest that the molecular toolkit for carpel development was largely present in the last commo
96 that the two genes act linearly in leaf and carpel development, but synergistically in the developme
97 al function of CRC lies in the regulation of carpel development, it may have been co-opted as a regul
98 loral C-function, which specifies stamen and carpel development, played a pivotal role in the evoluti
100 g approach provides a new tool for examining carpel development, which we hope will advance research
109 tion under short days, adaxialize leaves and carpels, disrupt the phyllotaxis of the inflorescence, a
110 pically and transcriptionally similar to the carpel, due to the parasite hijacking underlying genetic
111 nitially perfect but abort either stamens or carpels during their development, indicating that sex de
112 fication of reproductive organs (stamens and carpels) during the early steps of flower development.
114 including defects in petal polar expansion, carpel elongation, and anther and ovule differentiation.
120 N1, and demonstrate its identity to the CAF (CARPEL FACTORY) gene important for normal flower morphog
121 Mutation of an Arabidopsis Dicer homolog, CARPEL FACTORY, prevents the accumulation of miRNAs, sho
122 f carpel initiation, a phenocopy for loss of CARPEL FACTORY/DICER LIKE1, indicating that miRNA is cri
123 ponent of the spectacular diversification of carpel (flower and fruit) form and reproductive cycles i
124 Here, we characterized floral organs in carpels (foc), an Arabidopsis mutant with a Ds transposo
127 ed mechanisms in plant organs that, like the carpel, form within the shade of surrounding tissues.
129 e KNOX gene SHOOT MERISTEMLESS (STM) induces carpel formation and promotes homeotic conversion of ovu
132 ding to the previously identified stamen and carpel functions for GRCD1 and GRCD2, two partially redu
133 HEC1 interacts with SPATULA (SPT) to control carpel fusion and that both transcription factors restri
134 formation of placental tissues and inhibited carpel fusion to complete loss of carpel development.
135 the post-anthesis viability of unpollinated carpels has been overlooked, despite its importance for
138 ified previously as regulators of stamen and carpel identities and floral determinacy because the rec
139 required for the specification of stamen and carpel identities and for the proper termination of stem
141 dopsis floral meristem to specify stamen and carpel identity and to repress further proliferation of
142 , whose members typically promote stamen and carpel identity as well as floral meristem determinacy.
143 gene and as such ultimately depends upon the carpel identity gene AG for proper gene expression.
144 OsMAIL1 expression correlates with that of carpel identity genes and RNA-seq of osmail1-1 mutant co
145 showed that OsMAIL1 is required to activate carpel identity genes expression when floral meristems a
146 l feature IbAG appears to specify stamen and carpel identity, but is not sufficient to specify merist
148 s to the development of petals, stamens, and carpels in addition to sepals and that it plays an impor
151 ermination occurs through abortion of female carpels in the tassel and arrest of male stamens in the
152 the boundary between stamens in whorl 3 and carpels in whorl 4, as superman mutants exhibit supernum
155 uired for floral organogenesis, particularly carpel initiation, and acts through the auxin pathway in
156 r indicate a specific requirement for STM in carpel initiation, as further supported by the loss of l
159 sulted in homeotic conversion of stamens and carpels into sepaloid organs and loss of flower determin
161 In Arabidopsis, congenital fusion of two carpels leads to the formation of an enclosed gynoecium.
163 ls and petals, and conversion of sepals into carpel-like structures that grew into fruits and ripened
164 that preceded the origin of the true closed carpel, long styles, multiseeded ovaries, and, in monoco
165 gynoecium consists of two congenitally fused carpels made up of two lateral valve domains and two med
166 ere, we show that a mechanism that regulates carpel margin development in the model flowering plant A
167 r double mutants, failed to establish normal carpel margin meristem (CMM) and its derivative tissues,
170 In Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), the carpel margin meristem is a vital meristematic structure
171 of the medial ovary domain that contains the carpel margin meristem, a vital female reproductive stru
178 anscription factor (fasciated) that controls carpel number during flower and/or fruit development.
181 CsWUS, CsFUL1(A) and CsARF14 in determining carpel number variation in an important vegetable crop -
182 hermore, we found that auxin participated in carpel number variation in cucumber through interaction
184 n of adult vegetative traits, an increase in carpel number, and produce abnormal spacing of flowers i
185 ii) AG homologs are expressed in stamens and carpels of most basal angiosperms, in agreement with the
187 e homeotic conversion of sepals into petals, carpels, or stamens, depending on the genetic context.
188 horl of sepals surrounding a fourth whorl of carpels, or three whorls of sepals surrounding abnormal
190 l somatic sectors were observed in siliques, carpels, petals and sepals while stemlike organs (filame
191 face metabolites of different flower organs (carpels, petals, and sepals) were profiled for the first
193 controlling cell proliferation in stamen and carpel primordia and in ovules during flower development
194 two congenitally fused, laterally positioned carpel primordia bisected by two medially positioned mer
195 AGL1 expression at the tip of the growing carpel primordia, along the margins of the ovary valves
205 t program or that fdh-1 mutations activate a carpel-specific developmental program downstream of the
206 -dependent manner, suggesting that AGL1 is a carpel-specific gene and as such ultimately depends upon
207 of CsWUS resulted in more sepals, petals and carpels, suggesting that CsCLV3 and CsWUS function as a
209 d identify the gene that was affected by the carpel-suppressing mutation that was involved in the evo
210 etermining loci on the Y chromosome, one for carpel suppression, one for early stamen development, an
214 lorets of drl1 ears are sterile with unfused carpels that fail to enclose an expanded nucellus-like s
217 ne expression patterns between the seeds and carpels, the two tissues showed a cooperative relationsh
220 member, display ectopic formation of adaxial carpel tissues only when the functions of other genes, s
221 s the reproductive tract, develop within the carpel to facilitate the journey of the pollen tube.
223 ls that grow over long distances through the carpel toward the ovules, where double fertilization is
224 hape this variation, we examined 22 seed and carpel transcriptomes from 3 varieties of sesame with hi
225 g three whorls of sepals surrounding fertile carpels, two whorls of sepals with a diminished third wh
229 of ovules depends on EPFL2 expression in the carpel wall and in the inter-ovule spaces, where it acts
231 pathway controlled by EPFL9 acting from the carpel wall through the LRR-receptor kinases ER, ERL1, a
232 earing microsporangia of the anthers and the carpel walls of the gynoecium, which enclose the ovules.
233 differentiation of adaxial cell types in the carpel walls, and in the establishment of the correct nu
234 nd promotes homeotic conversion of ovules to carpels when ectopically expressed in flowers, as previo
235 entified transcripts are found in stamens or carpels, whereas few genes are predicted to be expressed
236 a3 single mutants have partially derepressed carpels, whereas gt1;ra3 double mutants have completely
237 3-RNAi led to increased number of petals and carpels, whereas overexpression of CsWUS resulted in mor
238 in, is involved in maintenance of the stamen/carpel whorl boundary (the boundary between whorl 3 and
240 embryos resulting from crosses of wild-type carpels with PRL::GUS pollen do not stain and are phenot
241 entric whorls of sepals, petals, stamens and carpels, with each of these floral organ types having a