Results 151 to 160 of about 137,953 (206)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Transgenic Plants for Phytoremediation
International Journal of Phytoremediation, 2011Phytoremediation is a green, sustainable and promising solution to problems of environmental contamination. It entails the use of plants for uptake, sequestration, detoxification or volatilization of inorganic and organic pollutants from soils, water, sediments and possibly air.
MAESTRI, Elena, MARMIROLI, Nelson
openaire +3 more sources
Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, 2005
AbstractRNA silencing in plants is a rapid and facile approach for assignment of gene function and virus resistance. It allows selective RNA degradation through a mechanism that is given specificity by short interfering RNAs. The RNA silencer sequences are normally delivered as transgenes or a part of virus‐vectors.
Joanne Chory+2 more
openaire +3 more sources
AbstractRNA silencing in plants is a rapid and facile approach for assignment of gene function and virus resistance. It allows selective RNA degradation through a mechanism that is given specificity by short interfering RNAs. The RNA silencer sequences are normally delivered as transgenes or a part of virus‐vectors.
Joanne Chory+2 more
openaire +3 more sources
Transgenic plants in the biopharmaceutical market [PDF]
Many of our 'small-molecule-drugs' are natural products from plants, or are synthetic compounds based on molecules found naturally in plants. However, the vast majority of the protein therapeutics (or biopharmaceuticals) we use are from animal or human sources, and are produced commercially in microbial or mammalian bioreactor systems.
Richard M. Twyman+2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Phytochemistry, 2002
Principles and applications: agriculture and food crops development, science, and society the dynamics of plant genome organization embryogenesis shoot regeneration and proliferation techniques for gene marking transferring, and tagging pollenbiotechnology parent-of-origin effects and seed development - genetics and epigenetics direct DNA delivery into
Y. H. Hui+4 more
openaire +4 more sources
Principles and applications: agriculture and food crops development, science, and society the dynamics of plant genome organization embryogenesis shoot regeneration and proliferation techniques for gene marking transferring, and tagging pollenbiotechnology parent-of-origin effects and seed development - genetics and epigenetics direct DNA delivery into
Y. H. Hui+4 more
openaire +4 more sources
Pharming and transgenic plants
2007Plant represented the essence of pharmacopoeia until the beginning of the 19th century when plant-derived pharmaceuticals were partly supplanted by drugs produced by the industrial methods of chemical synthesis. In the last decades, genetic engineering has offered an alternative to chemical synthesis, using bacteria, yeasts and animal cells as ...
David, Liénard+3 more
openaire +2 more sources
PHYTOREMEDIATION WITH TRANSGENIC PLANTS
Acta Horticulturae, 2006Genetic manipulation of environmentally important plants can produce elite plant lines with enhanced remediation abilities. Introduction of key genes to increase the remediation ability is an obvious approach and significant progress has been made in recent years in producing genetically modified plants from several species.
D. Liang+5 more
openaire +2 more sources
Production of antibodies in transgenic plants
Nature, 1989Complementary DNAs derived from a mouse hybridoma messenger RNA were used to transform tobacco leaf segments followed by regeneration of mature plants. Plants expressing single gamma or kappa immunoglobulin chains were crossed to yield progeny in which both chains were expressed simultaneously.
A. Hiatt, R Cafferkey, K Bowdish
openaire +3 more sources
Transcriptional interference in transgenic plants
Gene, 1991When a promoterless marker gene is transformed into the plant genome using the Agrobacterium vector system, on average 30% of the T-DNA inserts produce gene fusions. This suggests that the T-DNA is preferentially integrated into transcribed regions.
K. Vancompernolle+5 more
openaire +3 more sources
Clean Technologies and Environmental Policy, 2003
The new technology using plant genetics to produce chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and therapeutics in a wide array of new plant forms requires sufficient testing to ensure that these new plant introductions are benign in the environment. A recent effort to provide necessary guidance to aid the selection of confinement conditions can be found on the ...
openaire +2 more sources
The new technology using plant genetics to produce chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and therapeutics in a wide array of new plant forms requires sufficient testing to ensure that these new plant introductions are benign in the environment. A recent effort to provide necessary guidance to aid the selection of confinement conditions can be found on the ...
openaire +2 more sources