نتایج جستجو برای: secondary plastids

تعداد نتایج: 306522  

2017
Cessa Rauch Peter Jahns Aloysius G. M. Tielens Sven B. Gould William F. Martin

Plastids typically reside in plant or algal cells-with one notable exception. There is one group of multicellular animals, sea slugs in the order Sacoglossa, members of which feed on siphonaceous algae. The slugs sequester the ingested plastids in the cytosol of cells in their digestive gland, giving the animals the color of leaves. In a few species of slugs, including members of the genus Elys...

2015
Krzysztof Bobik Tessa M. Burch-Smith

The most conspicuous function of plastids is the oxygenic photosynthesis of chloroplasts, yet plastids are super-factories that produce a plethora of compounds that are indispensable for proper plant physiology and development. Given their origins as free-living prokaryotes, it is not surprising that plastids possess their own genomes whose expression is essential to plastid function. This semi...

Journal: :Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Cell Research 2013

Journal: :Plant physiology 1974
B J Miflin H Beevers

A technique for the isolation of intact plastids from spinach (Spinacia oleracea) and pea (Pisum sativum) leaves, pea roots and castor bean (Ricinus communis) endosperm is described. This technique involves brief centrifugation of whole homogenates on density gradients. Intact plastids were located in the gradient by assaying for triose phosphate isomerase activity. Contamination of the plastic...

Journal: :Plant physiology 1998
B Y Chen Y Wang H W Janes

The intracellular location of ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase (AGP) in developing pericarp of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill) has been investigated by immunolocalization. With the use of a highly specific anti-tomato fruit AGP antibody, the enzyme was localized in cytoplasm as well as plastids at both the light and electron microscope levels. The immunogold particles in plastids were locali...

Journal: :Protist 2004
Patrick Keeling

Plastids are photosynthetic organelles and their nonphotosynthetic derivatives found in plants and algae. They have many names, depending on their colour or function, including chloroplasts, chromoplasts, leucoplasts, or apicoplasts, but all of these are homologous structures tracing back to a single origin. Plastids are most commonly associated with photosynthesis, but are generally metabolica...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 1994

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