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1 tions from a biological wastewater treatment plant.
2 on of functional Tyr motifs also operates in plants.
3 nt players in cell-to-cell communications in plants.
4 ucing nutrient loads to wastewater treatment plants.
5 sing of progenitor sgRNAs occurs natively in plants.
6 her downstream factors regulate SAR in jmj14 plants.
7 on and inactivation of PVCV occurred in aged plants.
8 control a variety of biological processes in plants.
9 and internal hormonal functions in flowering plants.
10 ed to distinguish between non-TEs and TEs in plants.
11 best studied mRNA modification in flowering plants.
12 cterized CIF peptides conserved among higher plants.
13 iver from demographic studies of terrestrial plants.
14 oorganisms long before the evolution of land plants.
15 on of sequence-divergent peptide hormones in plants.
16 leaves and generated Arabidopsis transgenic plants.
17 ressed mainly in the siliques of Arabidopsis plants.
18 become the most complete database of SSPs in plants.
19 gulator of the nitrogen signaling pathway in plants.
20 t Britain Database of Insects and their Food Plants.
21 despread reproductive strategy in long-lived plants.
22 eak selective pressures, such as animals and plants.
23 ypothesized to contribute to hybrid vigor in plants.
24 ther studied by phenotyping knock-out mutant plants.
25 eased PEPc activity compared with warm-grown plants.
26 sh fruits, processed foods and as functional plants.
27 alent conjugation of recombinant proteins in plants.
28 used by the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant accident has aroused great concern regarding a pos
36 ight scattering and what can be learned from plants and animals to produce photonic materials from bi
38 , emphasizing conserved UPR elements between plants and metazoans and highlighting unique plant-speci
40 link of delta(13) C with WUE(i) in this C(4) plant, and can potentially be used as a screening tool f
41 s, confirmed complexes predicted to occur in plants, and identified previously unknown interactions c
46 ften exhibit relatively weaker NDD than rare plants at local scales is difficult to reconcile with th
48 the associations between different types of plant-based diets and incident metabolic syndrome (MetS)
49 raction technique, was used to fortify three plant-based food models: carbohydrates/acidic pH/sweet -
54 if there is a genetic relationship in a C(4) plant between delta(13) C(leaf) and WUE(plant) under wel
59 ce and distribution of organisms, especially plants, can alter resource landscapes for mobile consume
61 here is considerable interest in engineering plant cell wall components, particularly lignin, to impr
64 ted covalent cellulose-xyloglucan bonding in plant cell walls and showed that CXE and MXE action was
66 alysis of minor polysaccharide components of plant cell walls that are particularly difficult to assi
68 xchange of metabolites and signal molecules, plant cells use the extracellular matrix as an alternati
71 dress these issues by constructing the first plant clock models based on the S-System formalism origi
72 wfall will affect ecosystem productivity and plant community structure during the growing season.
73 ighted that (i) the fate of Zn in water-soil-plant compartments was similar, regardless of the type o
75 rolonged drought and reduced photosynthesis, plants consume stored nonstructural carbohydrates (NSCs)
83 rning approaches to a comprehensive vascular plant database for the United States and generate predic
84 ion of callose deposition, and targeting the plant defense regulator NPR1 and analyses receptor FLS2.
86 in aphid saliva that elicits effective host plant defenses and warranted the theory of host speciali
87 ning metabolic homeostasis while suppressing plant defenses, but the metabolic connections and requir
89 ded in gustatory receptor neurons to sense a plant-derived bitter compound, aristolochic acid (ARI).
95 pothesis is that pollinators affect rates of plant diversification through their effects on pollen di
96 edly during Younger Dryas cooling, but while plant diversity recovered in the early Holocene, animal
97 pt, we show significant losses in functional plant diversity when converting natural forests to agric
101 Many biological surfaces of animals and plants (e.g., bird feathers, insect wings, plant leaves,
102 limate and land use change are causing woody plant encroachment in arctic, alpine, and arid/semi-arid
106 analysis, we also showed that qPCR-negative plants exhibited HLB-specific spectral characteristics t
107 both greenhouse and field environments, with plants exposed to different levels of water stress or to
109 e sampled from 10 plots hosting 10 different plant families across three forest environments (Terra F
111 ation of water and carbon fluxes in vascular plants, finally examining specific evidence for evolutio
112 n about the impact of microbial diversity on plant fitness trade-offs, intraspecific-interactions, an
115 offee) and lower consumption of less-healthy plant foods (refined grains, potatoes, sugar-sweetened b
116 e represented greater consumption of healthy plant foods (whole grains, fruits, vegetables, nuts, leg
117 dietary intake, inability to classify a few plant foods as healthy and less-healthy, lack of data on
118 yan communities cultivate a great variety of plant foods that could be of interest due to their nutri
119 e diterpenoids are natural products found in plants from a subset of genera within the figwort family
120 lls provide a physical barrier that protects plants from pathogens, promotes tolerance to abiotic str
121 terfering RNA has potential applications for plant functional genomics, crop improvement and crop pro
123 gressing to a more mechanistic prediction of plant gas exchange is challenging because of the diversi
124 s (CNVs) are pervasive in several animal and plant genomes and contribute to shaping genetic diversit
127 t a model for UVR8 action in UV-B-acclimated plants growing in photoperiodic conditions that incorpor
128 depleted compost retained its structure, but plants grown in this medium were severely stunted in gro
132 nter of 2015/2016 led to a February onset of plant growth and the ecosystem became a sustained carbon
133 role of microbes in sustaining agricultural plant growth has great potential consequences for human
134 ophosphate (Pi) is an essential nutrient for plant growth, and its availability strongly impacts crop
135 ng due to a warming-induced earlier onset of plant growth, but decreased in autumn due mainly to incr
139 -type, fails to form spores, does not confer plant growth-promoting effect, and displays altered colo
143 c resources, terrestrial mammalian game, and plants had in supporting population growth, geographic d
144 jective was to determine if the asymptomatic plants harbored the latent blueberry red ringspot virus
145 example, previous authors have proposed that plants have broader environmental tolerances than animal
152 ely on insect vectors for transmission among plant hosts, but many of the specifics of virus-vector i
154 the diversity of organic matter derived from plants (i.e. litter) affect rates of decomposition.
158 verexpression of CsACD2 in citrus suppresses plant immunity and promotes Las multiplication, phenocop
159 into the cell death or survival decisions in plant immunity by modulating multiple stress-responsive
160 on transporter activity in the regulation of plant immunity is corroborated by experiments using the
165 ression (and their binary combinations) were planted in a diseased field plot in the Great Basin Dese
166 colonization of continents by vascular land plants in late Paleozoic, would certainly affect terrest
167 phenotyping facility was used to measure WUE(plant) in a recombinant inbred line (RIL) population cre
170 DCL3 in a natural setting was revealed when plants individually silenced in their expression (and th
175 tween the two bryophyte genomes and vascular plants is limited, suggesting extensive rearrangements s
176 essing GFP-CENH3 and CENH3-YFP in callus and plants is not and can be partly deposited normally.
178 ne factor limiting HFA accumulation in these plants is the inefficient removal of HFA from the site o
182 applied PULSE to control immune responses in plant leaves and generated Arabidopsis transgenic plants
183 d plants (e.g., bird feathers, insect wings, plant leaves, etc.) are superhydrophobic with rough surf
185 tic process, and it is not known whether the plant lysin-motif receptor-like kinase MtLYK10 intervene
187 s resulted in significant variation in total plant mass, diaspore mass, mass allocation to stem and r
188 rodent coprolites found in association with plant material, and tentatively assign them to the woodr
189 microbes that ferment otherwise indigestible plant matter, resist colonization by pathogens, and trai
190 ycorrhizal-acquired nutrient assimilation by plants may be symmetrically linked to carbon (C) transfe
195 s is proposed, based on molecular docking of plant metabolites within the ATP and D-cycloserine bindi
199 sheath cells, for the chilling-tolerant C(4) plant Miscanthus x giganteus grown at 14 and 25 degrees
202 is suggests that in animals, as in yeast and plants, myosin/actin can drive long-range transport.
206 also establish symbiotic relationships with plants, notably the arbuscular and ecto mycorrhizal fung
207 er systems after the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) accident in 1986 and in freshwater and marin
208 Applying synthetic signaling approaches to plants offers the promise of mitigating the worst effect
211 e current energy-lossy buildings into energy plants on Earth and possibly even enable extraterrestria
212 Research on eukaryotes such as animals, plants, oomycetes and fungi has shown that P450s profile
213 ubstantially in their expression profiles in plant organs and in response to environmental stresses,
215 R4 is not only reduced in ago4-1 but also in plants overexpressing a constitutively stable version of
223 oaches to quantify intrinsic growth rates of plant populations, including experiments beyond range bo
224 variable and synchronous seed production by plant populations, or masting, is a widespread reproduct
226 ovides chemical evidence for milk, meat, and plant processing by ancient herding societies in eastern
227 the maintenance of Fe homeostasis will alter plant productivity and the quality of their derived prod
228 effects of multisite phosphorylation on the plant protein kinase brassinosteroid insensitive 1-assoc
229 ll-studied experimental systems-encompassing plants, protists, and algae with grazers-we show that th
230 s giant daisies), an iconic and understudied plant radiation endemic to the Galapagos Islands and con
234 eline to constrain model-based hypotheses of plant responses to eCO(2) under P limitation, thereby im
239 zosphere, the thin layer of soil surrounding plant roots, plays a critical role in plant's adaptation
242 iption factors BPC1/BPC2 positively regulate plant salt tolerance by repressing GALS1 expression and
246 Strigolactones are an important class of plant signalling molecule with both external rhizospheri
247 s study provides a proof-of-concept that the plant-soil feedback concept can be applied to steer soil
250 ses during foraging, but the consequences of plant species composition for infection is unknown.
252 tion in soil microbial communities modulates plant species' distributions remains largely untested.
253 of MADS-box genes have been reported in many plant species, but its identification and characterizati
258 of phenotypic variation have been a focus of plant studies aimed at improving agricultural yield and
259 xogenous Pip partially restored SAR in jmj14 plants, suggesting that JMJ14 regulated Pip biosynthesis
260 association between the delta(13) C and WUE(plant) suggests an intrinsic link of delta(13) C with WU
265 s and generate predictive models of regional plant taxonomic and phylogenetic diversity in response t
266 ly, and spatially distinct subdomains of the plant TGN and suggest that functional redundancy can be
269 mity of the organogenesis process across all plants then explains the prevalence of certain patterns
270 the vegetative heat tolerance of adult rice plants through visual (stay-green) and chlorophyll fluor
273 etrically linked to carbon (C) transfer from plant to fungus or governed by sink-source dynamics.
274 ough this capacity partly allows animals and plants to acutely adapt to oxygen deprivation, its funct
279 first year of growth, overwintering biennial plants transport Suc through the phloem from photosynthe
280 SOC) must be considered to determine whether planting trees for climate change mitigation results in
281 s of the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and the plant-type [2Fe-2S] cluster of CntB and also of the Ries
283 C(4) plant between delta(13) C(leaf) and WUE(plant) under well watered and water-limited growth condi
286 triphasic nature of the relationship between plant water potential (Psi) at predawn and midday and de
287 how fruits regulate flowering in polycarpic plants, we focused on alternate bearing in Citrus trees
288 ble soils include high nitrate, moisture and plants; we investigate how differences in the soil micro
289 brates, surface water, sediments, soils, and plants were analyzed for 24 PFASs including branched iso
292 pha-2 and impalpha-3 resulted in Arabidopsis plants with a rapid flowering phenotype similar to that
293 NAE 18:3 being a lipid signaling molecule in plants with a requirement for G-proteins to mediate sign
295 rapid flowering phenotype similar to that of plants with mutations in lhp1 due to the upregulation of
296 n distinct subcellular compartments provides plants with the metabolic flexibility to maintain physio
300 wall sequential extraction performed on dry plant yielded 1.1, 2.4, 0.3 and 0.9% of pectin fractions