An important part of the female reproductive tract, enclosed within the gynoecium of angiosperms such as Arabidopsis thaliana, is the transmitting tract. It is a major component of the reproduction process, as the majority of the pollen tube growth occurs in the transmitting tract tissues. The transmitting tract region fails to develop in no transmitting tract (ntt) mutants, indicating that the NTT gene is necessary for specifying the transmitting tract. NTT encodes a putative transcription factor that is specifically expressed in the transmitting tract of the developing gynoecium. Here we generated and characterized promoter-GUS fusions of NTT and a number of putative downstream targets of NTT, including HALF FILLED (HAF), At1g30795 and At...
BACKGROUND:In flowering plants, the female gametophyte is typically a seven-celled structure with fo...
Several genes encoding transcription factors have been shown to be essential for male fertility in p...
The significance of putative transcriptional regulators and their expression patterns in the develop...
SummaryBackgroundThe majority of pollen-tube growth in Arabidopsis occurs in specialized tissue call...
Understanding the role of transcriptional regulation has had enormous consequences for how we percei...
The gynoecium, the female reproductive part of the flower, is key for plant sexual reproduction. Dur...
[EN] Fruits are complex plant structures that nurture seeds and facilitate their dispersal. The Arab...
The Arabidopsis gynoecium promotes the fertilization of ovules and subsequent seed development and d...
The formation of viable pollen relies upon a complex interaction of genes in time and space within t...
To identify genes specifically or predominantly expressed in the stigmas/styles and to establish the...
The female reproductive organ, the gynoecium, is the most complex structure that plants produce. The...
Contains fulltext : 27018.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Sexual plant rep...
[EN] This work tries to elucidate the possible relationship between NGATHA and TRANSMITTING NO TRAC...
SummaryIn angiosperms, sexual reproduction requires a sperm cell, contained within a pollen tube, to...
Multicellular organisms, such as plants, fungi, and animals, develop organs with specialized functio...
BACKGROUND:In flowering plants, the female gametophyte is typically a seven-celled structure with fo...
Several genes encoding transcription factors have been shown to be essential for male fertility in p...
The significance of putative transcriptional regulators and their expression patterns in the develop...
SummaryBackgroundThe majority of pollen-tube growth in Arabidopsis occurs in specialized tissue call...
Understanding the role of transcriptional regulation has had enormous consequences for how we percei...
The gynoecium, the female reproductive part of the flower, is key for plant sexual reproduction. Dur...
[EN] Fruits are complex plant structures that nurture seeds and facilitate their dispersal. The Arab...
The Arabidopsis gynoecium promotes the fertilization of ovules and subsequent seed development and d...
The formation of viable pollen relies upon a complex interaction of genes in time and space within t...
To identify genes specifically or predominantly expressed in the stigmas/styles and to establish the...
The female reproductive organ, the gynoecium, is the most complex structure that plants produce. The...
Contains fulltext : 27018.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Sexual plant rep...
[EN] This work tries to elucidate the possible relationship between NGATHA and TRANSMITTING NO TRAC...
SummaryIn angiosperms, sexual reproduction requires a sperm cell, contained within a pollen tube, to...
Multicellular organisms, such as plants, fungi, and animals, develop organs with specialized functio...
BACKGROUND:In flowering plants, the female gametophyte is typically a seven-celled structure with fo...
Several genes encoding transcription factors have been shown to be essential for male fertility in p...
The significance of putative transcriptional regulators and their expression patterns in the develop...