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1 s an evaporative cooling that mitigates crop heat stress.
2 der adverse environmental conditions such as heat stress.
3 d sorghum pistils to be equally sensitive to heat stress.
4 y conserved systems that protect plants from heat stress.
5 age in cool-seeking behaviour during passive heat stress.
6 bolism that contributes to yield loss during heat stress.
7 and is expected to decrease as a response to heat stress.
8 rmline gene expression and totipotency after heat stress.
9 educes fecundity and survival upon prolonged heat stress.
10 3 weeks after exposure to mild or temporary heat stress.
11 ion factor, a pivotal response of the UPR to heat stress.
12 the tolerance their product confers to plant heat stress.
13 upstream regulators directly associated with heat stress.
14 is necessary to maintain PM integrity under heat stress.
15 egates and is essential for surviving severe heat stress.
16 onstress conditions, high light exposure, or heat stress.
17 del for coral community response to frequent heat stress.
18 it our understanding of the full response to heat stress.
19 cepts to combat the negative consequences of heat stress.
20 veness to sympathetic outflow during passive heat stress.
21 GAT4D as a protector of male germ cells from heat stress.
22 stabilizes the digestive vacuole (DV) under heat stress.
23 003 identified as a temporal change point in heat stress.
24 ant association between depth and subsurface heat stress.
25 as induced, whereas TaRca2 was suppressed by heat stress.
26 lesterolaemia on the integrated responses to heat stress.
27 n immunogenic anti-TNF-alpha chimeric Ab, to heat stress.
28 mune tissues, such as the thymus, respond to heat stress.
29 torical temperature variability, rather than heat stress.
30 ites was directly associated with cumulative heat stress.
31 stress, we further subjected individuals to heat stress.
32 make sexual reproduction highly sensitive to heat stress.
33 hesized during heat stress and recovery from heat stress.
34 sis across eudicot and monocot species under heat stress.
35 system (UPS)-mediated proteolysis following heat stress.
36 ut when cardiac pre-load is increased during heat stress.
37 ch chloroplast processes are disturbed under heat stress.
38 ile some physiological traits were shaped by heat stress.
39 nd oligogalactolipids were more resistant to heat stress.
40 lthy older adults can achieve during passive heat stress.
41 tterns between cell types and in response to heat stress.
42 ar stripped roots, as well as in response to heat stress.
43 eproductive tissues during development under heat stress.
44 with reduced ethylene effects on yield under heat stress.
45 salt stress, heat stress, and recovery from heat stress.
46 al start sites, one of which is exclusive to heat stress.
47 t directly or indirectly with HSP22E/F under heat stress.
48 isms have developed mechanisms to respond to heat stress.
49 tures for 5 d and remained high at 4 h after heat stress.
50 intrinsic protector of male germ cells from heat stress.
51 gments cool-seeking behaviour during passive heat stress.
52 olerant pigs and heat-susceptible pigs under heat stress.
53 GAPC accumulates in the nucleus under heat stress.
54 ressing Mgat4d were partially protected from heat stress.
55 two mechanisms that enable plants to survive heat stress.
56 k-induced gene expression to protect against heat stress.
57 l PI(3)P function in DV stabilization during heat stress.
58 sion of somatic genes in the germline during heat stress.
59 ent in cool-seeking behaviour during passive heat stress.
60 erexpression (OE) and knockout mutants under heat stress.
61 tein products were measured during and after heat stress.
62 heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) in response to heat stress.
63 holdase, thereby preventing damage caused by heat stress.
64 expose large populations of adult plants to heat stress.
65 increased levels of light-stress elicited by heat-stress.
66 nsitivity to lose coral photosynthesis under heat-stress.
67 following pollination was also suppressed by heat-stress.
68 ture treatments: cold stress (18 degrees C), heat stress (32 degrees C), or a control (24 degrees C).
69 ceptible broiler line) were exposed to acute heat stress (35 degrees C) and/or immune simulation with
70 previously reported that clinically relevant heat-stress (37-41 degrees C) resulted in a classical he
71 : 18 degrees C (day : night) and exposed to heat stress (38 degrees C : 22 degrees C) for up to 5 d
72 BEZ235 or control and subjected to moderate heat stress (45 degrees C for 10 minutes) or control (37
73 adult brood stock in 2016 and 2017 owing to heat stress(6), the amount of larval recruitment decline
74 the DEGs (~3000) specifically responsive to heat stress, ~70% showed time of day (ZT1 or ZT6) occurr
76 oth exercise and temperature-matched passive heat stress ABSTRACT: Acute moderate-intensity exercise
78 c cells and milk metabolomics indicated that heat stress affected the mammary immune response to simu
80 have employed in situ Hi-C to determine how heat stress affects long-range chromatin conformation in
81 uggest growing resistance to bleaching-level heat stress among coral communities subject to high inte
82 protect against abiotic stressors including heat stress and drought, but there is very little mechan
84 NL-44, will minimize the negative impact of heat stress and increase global food productivity, benef
86 leached) was positively associated with both heat stress and nitrogen availability for both genera.
90 id not directly correlate with resilience to heat stress and suggested that each species may have a d
93 ing responses was associated with cumulative heat stress and/or local environmental history, includin
94 to cells lacking ClpP, are not sensitive to heat-stress and do not accumulate protein aggregates sho
95 ike scaffolds are robust, even under extreme heat stress, and control over nanocomposite dimensions i
97 rtant candidate genes related to drought and heat stress, and revealed important genomic regions poss
99 re markedly more sensitive to the effects of heat stress, and transgenic mice expressing Mgat4d were
100 transcriptionally induced upon growth under heat stress, and we find that positive selection is dete
102 pe-derived temperature estimates, suggesting heat stress as a main cause of body size reduction.
103 talytic PDX1 homologs that do not respond to heat stress as demonstrated for rice (Oryza sativa) and
104 tant seedlings were more sensitive to severe heat stress, as indicated by a more dramatic decline of
105 dystachion to single salinity, drought, and heat stresses, as well as their double and triple stress
108 conducted a series of 18-hr short-term acute heat stress assays side-by-side with a 21-day long-term
109 ial of mobile, standardized short-term acute heat stress assays to resolve fine-scale differences in
110 report that Arabidopsis plants subjected to heat stress at 37 degrees C show much higher frequencies
114 pid volume loading, performed during passive heat stress, augments both cutaneous vasodilatation and
121 ression profiles under the thermoneutral and heat stress conditions were documented in heat-tolerant
122 o stabilization of the catalytic PDX1s under heat stress conditions, which would serve to maintain vi
125 on networks on mRNAs of pigs under different heat-stress conditions using whole transcriptomic RNA-se
126 this gap by identifying the key measures of heat stress, considering both air temperature and near-s
127 ing climate projections, we show that future heat stress could reduce the forest edge growth enhancem
130 events found no meaningful depth refuge from heat stress down to 38 m, and no significant association
132 ly sensitive model to examine the effects of heat stress due to their intensive metabolic heat produc
134 ing exercise and temperature-matched passive heat stress during isocapnia (i.e. end-tidal PCO2 was he
136 r findings demonstrate that a short moderate heat stress during the highly susceptible tetrad stage s
137 he yield variability, with precipitation and heat stress during the late vegetative and early reprodu
138 d a high spatial and temporal variability of heat stress, emphasizing an observed increase in heat ex
140 were found to promote cell death induced by heat stress, ER stress, and cell death-inducing molecule
142 ed they are extensively ubiquitylated during heat stress, especially in plants deficient in HSP101 or
144 hing often is spatially variable for a given heat stress event, and drivers of this heterogeneity are
146 and 2017 as severe and widespread Caribbean heat-stress events and recognized a change point in 2002
148 tures on corals, to indicate the severity of heat stress experienced by corals and to gauge their pos
150 assays side-by-side with a 21-day long-term heat stress experiment to assess the ability of both app
154 re, we assessed three decades (1985-2017) of heat stress exposure in the wider Caribbean at ecoregion
156 he consequences of climate change, including heat stress, food scarcity, increases in pollution and v
158 re induced to a lesser extent in Mgat4d[-/-] heat-stressed germ cells (NFkappaB response, TNF and TGF
159 nd 6 miRNAs were differentially expressed in heat-stressed granulosa cells and the corresponding EVs,
161 s of endosymbiotic algae ("bleaching") under heat stress has become a major problem for reef-building
164 onal acclimatization on coral sensitivity to heat-stress, has received limited attention despite diff
166 . maxima infection in broiler chickens under heat stress (HS) and mRNA expression of host cytokines t
168 rmosusceptible Indian wheat cv. PBW343 under heat stress (HS) at 42 degrees C for 2 h using RNA-seque
170 of the potential cellular targets of HL and heat stress (HS) combination is PSII because its degree
171 of heat shock proteins (HSPs) in response to heat stress (HS) is indispensable for conferring thermot
173 +/- 5% RH (HIGH), followed by 60 min passive heat stress (HS) where the water temperature in the suit
176 50% workload max) and (ii) 75 min of passive heat stress (HS; 49 degrees C water-perfused suit) to ma
177 (Arachis hypogaea L.) anther lipidome under heat stress (HT) will aid in understanding the mechanism
178 fy differentially sumoylated proteins during heat stress, hyperosmotic stress, oxidative stress, nitr
179 observed flowering dates and disaggregating heat-stress impacts, both pre- and postflowering stages
180 r severe bleaching even under relatively low heat stress implies that mitigating nutrient pollution m
182 eq to analyze gene-expression changes during heat stress in a coral relative, the sea anemone Aiptasi
184 lated in reproductive tissues in response to heat stress in a manner to optimize resource allocation
185 role for this lethal pathway in response to heat stress in Arabidopsis thaliana The similarity of fe
188 areas, exposes urban dwellers to additional heat stress in many cities, specially during heat waves.
189 e substrates with which they interact during heat stress in order to understand which chloroplast pro
194 t proteasome function was impaired following heat stress in senescent cells, and did not recover upon
195 oduced a new baseline and regionalization of heat stress in the basin that will enhance conservation
196 ediates HCC cell survival caused by moderate heat stress in vitro, but these findings need in vivo va
200 gments cool-seeking behaviour during passive heat stress independently of differential increases in s
202 PI3K/mTOR inhibition prevented moderate heat stress-induced AKT signaling (Z-score, -0.2; P < .0
203 ed pollen and pistil viability will overcome heat stress-induced damage during flowering under curren
204 PI3K/mTOR inhibition prevented moderate heat stress-induced global effects on HCC molecular sign
207 score, 0.4-1.1; P < .001).ConclusionModerate heat stress induces PI3K/mTOR/AKT-dependent global effec
215 uard that protects proteins against moderate heat stress, likely through a redox-dependent chaperone
216 rmal tolerance were response to experimental heat stress, location on the reef, and thermal microclim
220 tion of toxic and bacterial compounds during heat stress may have triggered a modulated immune repert
221 an air temperature is nonlinearly related to heat stress, meaning that the same future warming as rea
223 del that included an interaction between two heat stress metrics, the most substantial loss occurring
224 cessful pollination and ovule fertilization, heat-stress modified PsACS and PsACO transcript profiles
225 ibati, which experience years with prolonged heat stress more frequently than 99% of the world's reef
227 from the nucleolus to the nucleoplasm during heat stress; nucleolar pools are replenished during reco
229 ther hand, when males were subjected to mild heat stress of the testis (43 degrees C for 25 min), ger
230 g event, we quantified the effects of severe heat stress on 3D reef structural complexity across a gr
232 mechanisms, we imposed a moderate transient heat stress on maize (Zea mays) plants at the tetrad sta
233 tion and to evaluate the effects of moderate heat stress on molecular signaling and cellular function
234 ves, thus supporting the influence of direct heat stress on reproductive processes in determining yie
236 Our bovine model indicates direct effects of heat stress on the jejunum of mammals already at moderat
239 , to determine the severity of the impact of heat-stress on coral physiology, but also the dependence
242 (PDAT1) were unable to accumulate TAGs after heat stress, phosphatidylcholine appears to be the major
243 intronic poly(A) sites used in drought- and heat-stressed plants that might play an important role i
245 umably its induction of genes in response to heat stress) plays an important protective role in coral
246 racted with a different set of proteins upon heat stress, possibly protecting them from heat injuries
247 n the United States, where precipitation and heat stress presents a temporal pattern among growth pha
248 both coral genera, Pocillopora and Acropora, heat stress primarily drove bleaching prevalence (i.e.,
250 onal and metabolic pathway genes, as well as heat stress proteins, remained altered even though polle
251 ing exercise and temperature-matched passive heat stress provoked ~16% increases in vertebral artery
252 hat cells may have the ability to respond to heat stress quickly though Hsp70 deacetylation, followed
253 t pollen viability determines seed set under heat stress, recent findings have revealed pearl millet
255 analysis classified the Caribbean into eight heat-stress regions offering a new regionalization schem
257 gent strains were characterized for salt and heat stress resilience as well as antimicrobial and plan
258 ons between disturbance, coral symbioses and heat stress resilience reveal multiple pathways to coral
262 f genes and biological mechanisms related to heat stress response in pigs and provide potential bioma
265 ss (37-41 degrees C) resulted in a classical heat-stress response with up-regulation of cellular chap
270 time of day and/or the clock to differential heat stress responses, we probed wild-type and mutants o
271 ht a significant role for time of day in the heat stress responsive transcriptome, and the clock thro
273 perature data can provide bleaching-relevant heat stress results to avoid misrepresentation of heat s
275 c (continuous, i.e., high-intensity) drought-heat stress scenarios in gray poplar (Populusx canescens
276 n the afternoon compared to the morning, and heat stress significantly perturbed the transcriptome.
278 r of 10) as well as the ability to withstand heat stress, storage at room temperature, and three free
279 RCP scenarios, whereas high temperature and heat stress take over the dominant stress of drought on
280 sults indicate that with low feed intake and heat stress, there are shifts in rumen VFA dynamics and
281 h confidence with chloroplast HSP22E/F under heat stress thus revealing chloroplast processes affecte
282 s study utilized the sensitivity of semen to heat stress to discriminate the heat-tolerance ability o
284 lated in reproductive tissues in response to heat stress to modulate resource allocation dynamics.
286 esults provide a mechanism for improving the heat stress tolerance of photosynthesis in wheat and pot
289 siological studies suggest that HS-activated heat stress transcription factor A1s also positively reg
290 poxia promoted a progressive upregulation of heat stress transcripts, as evidenced by RNAPII binding
291 ent with a model in which, upon the onset of heat stress, translation is rapidly reprogrammed to enha
297 ances C(3) plant productivity, whereas acute heat stress, which occurs during heat waves, generally e
298 ng of the regulation of C assimilation under heat stress will inform efforts to improve wheat product
299 sed by ~43% during both exercise and passive heat stress, with no change in internal carotid artery b
300 d that rapid volume loading performed during heat stress would increase cardiac output in older adult