Results 281 to 290 of about 280,308 (388)
Group I LPMO15‐1 cDNAs from two economically important forest insect pests, M. alternatus and P. hilaris, were cloned. MaLPMO15‐1 and PhLPMO15‐1 show a similar pattern of expression during late stages of development. RNAi for LPMO15‐1 causes failure of adult eclosion in both M. alternatus and P. hilaris.
Daehyeong Kim +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Chemical Profiling of <i>Gmelina philippensis</i> Cham. Leaf Extract and Its Antioxidant and Anti-Cholinesterase Properties. [PDF]
Aly SH +6 more
europepmc +1 more source
High‐quality genomes of four wild raspberry species, analysis of their genetic relationships, identification of centromeres as markers for tracing their hybrid origins, exploration of fruit quality regulation, and discovery of a gene blocking anthocyanin transport and thus causing yellow fruits provides valuable resources for raspberry breeding ...
Ticao Zhang +11 more
wiley +1 more source
Preparation of ketonyl <i>C</i>-glycosides from designed glycosyl sulfides and styrenes by a radical pathway. [PDF]
Shang W, Hu Y, He Y, Niu D, Li W.
europepmc +1 more source
Drivers of strigolactone diversity: P450s in strigolactone biosynthesis
This review summarizes the discovery and functional identification of cytochrome P450 in strigolactone biosynthesis, classifies and summarizes the members discovered so far, clarifies their biological significance, discusses the technology of strigolactone synthesis research, and finally describes some problems in strigolactone research and potential ...
Changbin Niu +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Chemical Mechanisms Underlying Sweetness Enhancement During Processing of Rehmanniae Radix: Carbohydrate Hydrolysis, Degradation of Bitter Compounds, and Interaction with Taste Receptors. [PDF]
Zu W +8 more
europepmc +1 more source
Heterogeneity of iridoid biosynthesis in catmints: Molecular background in a phylogenetic context
Evolutionary gains and losses of key biosynthetic genes likely resulting from multiple independent evolutionary events explain why certain Nepeta (catnip) species produce both the active, cat‐attracting nepetalactones and sugar‐bound iridoids, while others make only the sugar‐bound forms, and some have lost iridoid production entirely.
Tijana Banjanac +15 more
wiley +1 more source

