نتایج جستجو برای: leaf senescence

تعداد نتایج: 102666  

2017
Liliana Avila-Ospina Gilles Clément Céline Masclaux-Daubresse Karin Krupinska

Leaf senescence is a long developmental phase important for plant performance and nutrient management. Cell constituents are recycled in old leaves to provide nutrients that are redistributed to the sink organs. Up to now, metabolomic changes during leaf senescence have been mainly studied in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana L.). The metabolite profiling conducted in barley (Hordeum vulgare L....

2015
Daoqian Chen Shiwen Wang Binglin Xiong Beibei Cao Xiping Deng Fábio M. DaMatta

Drought stress triggers mature leaf senescence, which supports plant survival and remobilization of nutrients; yet leaf senescence also critically decreases post-drought crop yield. Drought generally results in carbon/nitrogen imbalance, which is reflected in the increased carbon:nitrogen (C:N) ratio in mature leaves, and which has been shown to be involved in inducing leaf senescence under nor...

Journal: :Journal of experimental botany 2001
R H Lee C H Wang L T Huang S C Chen

To identify senescence-associated genes (SAGs) in rice leaves, senescence was induced by transferring rice seedlings into darkness. Senescence up-regulated cDNAs were obtained by PCR-based subtractive hybridization. Among 14 SAG clones characterized, 11 were found to be associated with both dark-induced and natural leaf senescence. Three clones were associated only with dark-induced leaf senesc...

Journal: :Plant physiology 1992
S J Crafts-Brandner

Remobilization of mineral nutrients from leaves to reproductive structures is a possible regulatory factor in leaf senescence. The relationship between P remobilization from leaves of soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr. cv McCall) during reproductive development and leaf senescence was determined by utilizing soil P treatments that supplied deficient, optimum, and supraoptimum soil P levels. The so...

2018
Yi Song Yupei Jiang Benke Kuai Lin Li

Leaf senescence is an integral part of plant development, and the timing and progressing rate of senescence could substantially affect the yield and quality of crops. It has been known that a circadian rhythm synchronized with external environmental cues is critical for the optimal coordination of various physiological and metabolic processes. However, the reciprocal interactions between the ci...

Journal: :Plant physiology 1979
N Aharoni M Lieberman

The regulatory role of ethylene in leaf senescence was studied with excised tobacco leaf discs which were allowed to senesce in darkness. Exogenous ethylene, applied during the first 24 hours of senescence, enhanced chlorophyll loss without accelerating the climacteric-like pattern of rise in both ethylene and CO(2), which occurred in the advanced stage of leaf senescence. Rates of both ethylen...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2015
Hiroaki Ueda Makoto Kusaba

Leaf senescence is not a passive degenerative process; it represents a process of nutrient relocation, in which materials are salvaged for growth at a later stage or to produce the next generation. Leaf senescence is regulated by various factors, such as darkness, stress, aging, and phytohormones. Strigolactone is a recently identified phytohormone, and it has multiple functions in plant develo...

Journal: :The Plant cell 2002
Yuehui He Susheng Gan

SAG101, a leaf senescence-associated gene, was cloned from an Arabidopsis leaf senescence enhancer trap line and functionally characterized. Reporter gene and RNA gel blot analyses revealed that SAG101 was not expressed until the onset of senescence in leaves. A recombinant SAG101 fusion protein overexpressed in Escherichia coli displayed acyl hydrolase activity. Antisense RNA interference in t...

Journal: :Plant physiology 1997
S. Gan R. M. Amasino

Leaf senescence is the final stage of leaf development. In forests of deciduous trees, the autumn colors that develop during leaf senescence are of great aesthetic value. This process is also of great practical value because during leaf senescence, nutrients are recycled to other parts of the plant. For example, nitrogen from leaves of deciduous trees is used for the synthesis of storage protei...

Journal: :Journal of experimental botany 2008
Hezhong Dong Yuehua Niu Weijiang Li Dongmei Zhang

Leaf senescence varies greatly among cotton cultivars, possibly due to their root characteristics, particularly the root-sourced cytokinins and abscisic acid (ABA). Early-senescence (K1) and late-senescence (K2) lines, were reciprocally or self-grafted to examine the effects of rootstock on leaf senescence and endogenous hormones in both leaves and xylem sap. The results indicate that the graft...

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