نتایج جستجو برای: stomata resistance

تعداد نتایج: 377285  

Journal: :Plant physiology 1991
M J Harris W H Outlaw

Detached broad bean (Vicia faba L.) leaflets were water stressed; within 15 minutes, guard-cell abscisic acid (ABA) concentration increased ninefold. This result eliminates the apparent discrepancy raised by reports of no correlation between initial water-stress effects on stomata and leaf ABA concentration. Six hours after stress relief, guard-cell ABA concentration was near the prestress valu...

2011

Our understanding of stomatal development in Arabidopsis thaliana is based on mutants with aberrant, often lethal phenotypes. Through a comprehensive analysis of stomatal abundance in wild A. thaliana accessions, Delgado et al. (pp. 1247–1258) determine relationships amongst stomata-related traits and uncover hidden genetic variation in stomata developmental pathways. The study identifies natur...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2011
Charles Hachez Kyoko Ohashi-Ito Juan Dong Dominique C Bergmann

Nearly all extant land plants possess stomata, the epidermal structures that mediate gas exchange between the plant and the environment. The developmental pathways, cell division patterns, and molecules employed in the generation of these structures are simple examples of processes used in many developmental contexts. One specific module is a set of "master regulator" basic helix-loop-helix tra...

Journal: :Journal of neuromuscular diseases 2015
Benedikt Schoser

Based on those guidelines, distinct scenarios will be discussed. Scenario 1: When shall we start treatment in an asymptomatic Pompe patient with hyperCKemia only? Here, most Pompe experts would recommend a wait-and-see strategy with close clinical follow-up every 3 months with functional measures, such as sixminute walking test, lung function tests, and a muscle MRI investigation at least every...

Journal: :Journal of experimental botany 2007
Roman Zweifel Kathy Steppe Frank J Sterck

Dynamics in microclimate and physiological plant traits were studied for Pubescent oak and Scots pine in a dry inner-alpine valley in Switzerland, at a 10 min resolution for three consecutive years (2001-2003). As expected, stomata tended to close with increasing drought in air and soil. However, stomatal aperture in oak was smaller than in pine under relatively wet conditions, but larger under...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2016
Mark G R Bundy Pawel Z Kosentka Alaina H Willet Liang Zhang Emily Miller Elena D Shpak

GPI-anchored proteins (GPI-APs) are essential for plant growth and development; knockout mutations in enzymes responsible for anchor biosynthesis or attachment are gametophyte or embryo lethal. In a genetic screen targeted to identify genes regulating stomata formation, we discovered a missense mutation in the Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) homolog of GPI8/PIG-K, a Cys protease that transfe...

2013
Robin Meadows

Unlike animals, which breathe through airways lined with pathogen-trapping defenses, plants get air through tiny pores in their leaves that all but invite bacteria to sneak in. How, then, do plants keep them out? They slam their pores, or stomata, shut. Stomata are flanked by guard cells that swell when triggered by bacteria, thus closing the pores. Besides being fascinating in its own right, t...

2014
Martin Balcerowicz Aashish Ranjan Laura Rupprecht Gabriele Fiene Ute Hoecker

Stomatal development is tightly regulated through internal and external factors that are integrated by a complex signalling network. Light represents an external factor that strongly promotes stomata formation. Here, we show that auxin-resistant aux/iaa mutants, e.g. axr3-1, exhibit a de-repression of stomata differentiation in dark-grown seedlings. The higher stomatal index in dark-grown axr3-...

2016
Maria Papanatsiou Anna Amtmann Michael R. Blatt

Stomata enable gaseous exchange between the interior of the leaf and the atmosphere through the stomatal pore. Control of the pore aperture depends on osmotic solute accumulation by, and its loss from the guard cells surrounding the pore. Stomata in most plants are separated by at least one epidermal cell, and this spacing is thought to enhance stomatal function, although there are several gene...

Journal: :SIAM J. Scientific Computing 2007
Aaron Luttman Johnathan M. Bardsley

In order to engage in photosynthesis, plant leaves absorb CO2 via the opening of pores in their surfaces called stomata. Water evaporates through open stomata, however, which is a detriment to plant function. Thus a plant will seek a stomatal aperture that balances its need for CO2 with its aversion to H2O loss. In order to visualize a particular leaf’s stomatal aperture, an experimentalist inj...

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