نتایج جستجو برای: plastid rpl32 trnluag

تعداد نتایج: 5117  

Ali Hatef Salmanian, Amir Mousavi, Haleh Hashemi Sohi Mahyat Jafari Mehrnoosh Fathi Roudsari

Presence of antibiotic resistance markers has always been considered as one of the main safety concerns in transgenic plants and their derived products. Elimination of antibiotic selectable markers from transgenics is a major hurdle for finding efficient and safe candidates. Herbicide tolerance genes might be attractive alternatives. In this study, a variant form of the 5-enoylpyruvyl shikimate...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 2000
U G Maier M Fraunholz S Zauner S Penny S Douglas

Chloroplasts contain proteins that are encoded by different genetic systems, the plastid genome and the nuclear chromosomes. By comparing the gene content of plastid genomes of different taxa, some predictions about nuclear-encoded genes for plastid proteins are possible. However, early in evolution, many genes were transferred from the plastid to the cell nucleus and are therefore missing from...

2018
Miyuki T Nakata Mayuko Sato Mayumi Wakazaki Nozomi Sato Koji Kojima Akihiko Sekine Shiori Nakamura Toshiharu Shikanai Kiminori Toyooka Hirokazu Tsukaya Gorou Horiguchi

The plastid evolved from a symbiotic cyanobacterial ancestor and is an essential organelle for plant life, but its developmental roles in roots have been largely overlooked. Here, we show that plastid translation is connected to the stem cell patterning in lateral root primordia. The RFC3 gene encodes a plastid-localized protein that is a conserved bacterial ribosomal protein S6 of β/γ proteoba...

Journal: :The Journal of eukaryotic microbiology 2007
Marc A Toso Charlotte K Omoto

Gregarines are early diverging apicomplexans that appear to be closely related to Cryptosporidium. Most apicomplexans, including Plasmodium, Toxoplasma, and Eimeria, possess both plastids and corresponding plastid genomes. Cryptosporidium lacks both the organelle and the genome. To investigate the evolutionary history of plastids in the Apicomplexa, we tried to determine whether gregarines poss...

Journal: :The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology 2004
Mark T Waters Rupert G Fray Kevin A Pyke

Stromules are motile extensions of the plastid envelope membrane, whose roles are not fully understood. They are present on all plastid types but are more common and extensive on non-green plastids that are sparsely distributed within the cell. During tomato fruit ripening, chloroplasts in the mesocarp tissue differentiate into chromoplasts and undergo major shifts in morphology. In order to un...

2005
Brian J. Baumgartner

Plastid transcription activity and DNA copy number were quantified during chloroplast development in the first foliage leaf in dark-grown and illuminated barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) seedlings. Primary foliage leaves of seedlings given continuous illumination from 2 days post-imbibition reached a final mean length of 15 centimeters at 6.5 days, whereas primary leaves of darkgrown seedlings requi...

Journal: :The Journal of parasitology 2010
Andrzej Bodył Paweł Mackiewicz Rafał Milanowski

The Trypanosomatidae is closely related to euglenids that harbor plastids acquired from a green alga via secondary endosymbiosis. This discovery led to the idea that trypanosomatid parasites contained a green alga-derived plastid in their evolutionary past, an evolutionary scenario that was criticized based on the rarity of plant/plastid/cyanobacterium-like genes in the completely sequenced gen...

Journal: :Annual review of plant biology 2013
Wei Chi Xuwu Sun Lixin Zhang

Intracellular signaling from plastids to the nucleus, called retrograde signaling, coordinates the expression of nuclear and plastid genes and is essential for plastid biogenesis and for maintaining plastid function at optimal levels. Recent identification of several components involved in plastid retrograde generation, transmission, and control of nuclear gene expression has provided significa...

2014
Elisabeth Hehenberger Behzad Imanian Fabien Burki Patrick J. Keeling

Dinoflagellates harboring diatom endosymbionts (termed "dinotoms") have undergone a process often referred to as "tertiary endosymbiosis"--the uptake of algae containing secondary plastids and integration of those plastids into the new host. In contrast to other tertiary plastids, and most secondary plastids, the endosymbiont of dinotoms is distinctly less reduced, retaining a number of cellula...

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