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Transformation of lisianthus (Eustoma grandiflorum)

Plant Cell Reports, 1997
Transformed plants from three cultivars of Eustoma grandiflorum (lisianthus) were produced by cocultivating young leaf pieces with Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain A722 containing the binary vectors pKIWI110 and pLN26. Both vectors contain the selectable marker gene for neomycin phosphotransferase II.
S E, Ledger   +4 more
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Transgenic Eustoma grandiflorum (Lisianthus)

2001
Lisianthus or prairie gentian [Eustoma grandiflorum (Griseb.) Shinn.] is a member of the family Gentianaceae and native to the prairies of the U.S.A. (Shinners 1957). A typical wild-type plant produces a single stem with a purple flower. Intensive breeding in Japan over the past 40 years has resulted in the generation of cut-flower varieties with ...
T. Handa, S. C. Deroles
openaire   +1 more source

Flavonoids from Eustoma grandiflorum flower petals

Phytochemistry, 1986
Abstract The major flavonoids responsible for flower colours of Eustoma grandiflorum were characterized by TLC, HPLC, spectral and chemical analyses. Anthocyanins were delphinidin 3-rhamnosylgalactoside-5-glucoside and delphinidin 3-galactoside-5-glucoside, each acylated with p -coumaric acid, from the purple cultivar ‘Murasaki no Homare’ and the ...
Sam Asen   +3 more
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Floral transition in lisianthus (Eustoma grandiflorum)

Scientia Horticulturae, 2002
Abstract Floral transition was studied in lisianthus [Eustoma grandiflorum (Raf.) Shinn.] plants grown in a greenhouse at two planting times (winter and summer) under two photoperiod regimes: long day (LD) and short day (SD), 16 h/8 h and 8 h/16 h (light/dark), respectively.
Michele Zaccai, Nurit Edri
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Eustoma undetermined

Published as part of Gründel, Joachim & Nützel, Alexander, 2024, Late Jurassic (Upper Kimmeridgian) gastropods from Saal near Kelheim (Germany, Bavaria), pp.
Gründel, Joachim, Nützel, Alexander
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Somatic Embryogenesis in Lisianthus (Eustoma russellianum Griseb.)

2016
Somatic embryogenesis is, for the main floricultural crops, a promising system for commercial scale-up, providing cloned material to be traded as seedlings. Somatic embryos, having the contemporary presence of root apical meristem and shoot apical meristem, can be readily acclimatized.
Barbara, Ruffoni, Laura, Bassolino
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Stable transformation of Eustoma grandiflorum by particle bombardment

Plant Cell Reports, 1998
Explants (7.5±2.5 mm) cut from stems and roots of 3-week-old Eustoma grandiflorum Grise, (lisianthus) cv. Glory White seedlings were bombarded with plasmid pBI221, which harbors the uidA gene encoding β-glucuronidase (GUS) driven by the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S promoter.
M, Takahashi   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Transformation in Eustoma grandiflorum (Lisianthus)

1993
Lisianthus (Eustoma grandiflorum (Griseb) Shinn.] is a gentian native to the central and southern United States (Bailey 1949, Shinners 1957). Due to its large flowers, long stems, and extended vase life, it is an increasingly popular cut flower. The typical wild plant has blue-purple flowers, but intensive breeding in Japan over the last 30 years has ...
S. C. Deroles   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Eustoma Piette 1855

GenusEustomaPiette, 1855 Type species. Eustoma tuberculosa Piette, 1855; Bathonian; France.
Gründel, Joachim, Nützel, Alexander
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Eustoma exaltatum G. Don

2007
Gentiana exaltata Linnaeus, Species Plantarum, ed. 2, 1: 331. 1762. "Habitat in America." RCN: 1866. Lectotype (Shinners in S. W. Naturalist 2: 40. 1957): [icon] " Gentiana foliis sessilibus, lanceolatis " in Plumier in Burman, Pl. Amer.: 71, t. 81, f. 1. 1756. Current name: Eustoma exaltatum (L.) G. Don (Gentianaceae).
openaire   +1 more source

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