Functional-structural plant modelling: a new versatile tool in crop science. (57/95)

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A method to construct dose-response curves for a wide range of environmental factors and plant traits by means of a meta-analysis of phenotypic data. (58/95)

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Mixed-power scaling of whole-plant respiration from seedlings to giant trees. (59/95)

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Precocious flowering in trees: the FLOWERING LOCUS T gene as a research and breeding tool in Populus. (60/95)

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Phylogenetic and bioinformatic analysis of gap junction-related proteins, innexins, pannexins and connexins. (61/95)

All multi-cellular animals, including hydra, insects and vertebrates, develop gap junctions, which communicate directly with neighboring cells. Gap junctions consist of protein families called connexins in vertebrates and innexins in invertebrates. Connexins and innexins have no homology in their amino acid sequence, but both are thought to have some similar characteristics, such as a tetra-membrane-spanning structure, formation of a channel by hexamer, and transmission of small molecules (e.g. ions) to neighboring cells. Pannexins were recently identified as a homolog of innexins in vertebrate genomes. Although pannexins are thought to share the function of intercellular communication with connexins and innexins, there is little information about the relationship among these three protein families of gap junctions. We phylgenetically and bioinformatically examined these protein families and other tetra-membrane-spanning proteins using a database and three analytical softwares. The clades formed by pannexin families do not belong to the species classification but do to paralogs of each member of pannexins. Amino acid sequences of pannexins are closely related to those of innexins but less to those of connexins. These data suggest that innexins and pannexins have a common origin, but the relationship between innexins/pannexins and connexins is as slight as that of other tetra-membrane-spanning members.  (+info)

New phenotyping methods for screening wheat and barley for beneficial responses to water deficit. (62/95)

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High-throughput shoot imaging to study drought responses. (63/95)

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A geospatial modelling approach integrating archaeobotany and genetics to trace the origin and dispersal of domesticated plants. (64/95)

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