Results 291 to 300 of about 293,773 (346)
Nurr1 Orchestrates Claustrum Development and Functionality
Nurr1 (Nr4a2) is the master transcription factor to control claustrum morphogenesis and cell fate decision postmitotically by inhibiting intracellular G‐protein signaling. Nurr1 deficiency alters the transcriptomic profiles of subcortical claustral neurons into neocortical insular neurons, resulting in defected claustrum development, impaired axonal ...
Kuo Yan +12 more
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The StERF10‐StGSH1 module coordinates glutathione (GSH) biosynthesis under low‐phosphorus stress. The low‐phosphate‐induced AP2/ERF transcription factor StERF10 directly activates the transcription of StGSH1 and enhances GSH accumulation. Consequently, GSH scavenges reactive oxygen species and provides sulfur for sulfolipid synthesis, facilitating the ...
Xiaocheng Tian +9 more
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In this article, Shuai and colleagues found that depletion of Sorcs3 could activate totipotency in mESCs, promising bidirectional differentiation potential to embryonic and extraembryonic lineages. The underlying mechanism might be activation of Tfap2c and repression of TGF‐β, PI3K‐AKT, and lysosome pathways.
Wenhao Zhang +12 more
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Two distinct modes of action of molecular glues in the plant hormone co-receptor COI1-JAZ system. [PDF]
Kaji T +7 more
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This study developed a 3D endometrial assembloid model to study how uterine glands form and develop. They discovered key interactions between different cell types and identified WNT7B as a regulator controlled by estradiol‐mediated TGFβ1‐VDR interaction.
Xintong Li +12 more
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Effect of choline amino acid ionic liquids on maize seed germination and endogenous plant hormone levels. [PDF]
Chen X +8 more
europepmc +1 more source
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Plant Molecular Biology, 1994
Plant hormones are an unusual group of secondary plant constituents playing a regulatory role in plant growth and development. The regulating properties appear in course of the biosynthetic pathways and are followed by deactivation via catabolic processes.
G, Sembdner, R, Atzorn, G, Schneider
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Plant hormones are an unusual group of secondary plant constituents playing a regulatory role in plant growth and development. The regulating properties appear in course of the biosynthetic pathways and are followed by deactivation via catabolic processes.
G, Sembdner, R, Atzorn, G, Schneider
openaire +2 more sources
Plant hormones, plant growth regulators
Orvosi Hetilap, 2014Plants seem to be rather defenceless, they are unable to do motion, have no nervous system or immune system unlike animals. Besides this, plants do have hormones, though these substances are produced not in glands. In view of their complexity they lagged behind animals, however, plant organisms show large scale integration in their structure and ...
György, Végvári, Edina, Vidéki
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Plant Brassinosteroid Hormones
2005In animals, a large number of steroid hormones play important roles in numerous processes including reproduction and differentiation. The biologically active plant steroid brassinolide (BL) was first discovered in the pollen of western rape in 1979 (Grove et al., 1979).
Tadao, Asami +2 more
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