There are numerous examples of plant organs or developmental stages that are desiccation-tolerant and can withstand extended periods of severe water loss. One prime example are seeds and pollen of many spermatophytes. However, in some plants, also vegetative organs can be desiccation-tolerant. One example are the tubers of yellow nutsedge (Cyperus esculentus), which also store large amounts of lipids similar to seeds. Interestingly, the closest known relative, purple nutsedge (Cyperus rotundus), generates tubers that do not accumulate oil and are not desiccation-tolerant. We generated nanoLC-MS/MS-based proteomes of yellow nutsedge in five replicates of four stages of tuber development and compared them to the proteomes of roots and leaves,...
Includes bibliographical references.In angiosperms, desiccation tolerance, a genetic trait that enab...
The ability to survive vegetative-tissue desiccation, defined as the near complete loss (80-95%) of ...
Desiccation tolerance (DT) is the capacity to withstand total loss of cellular water. It is acquired...
There are numerous examples of plant organs or developmental stages that are desiccation-tolerant an...
In contrast to orthodox seeds that acquire desiccation tolerance during maturation, recalcitrant see...
The combination of robust physiological models with “omics” studies holds promise for the discovery ...
Desiccation-tolerance in vegetative tissues of angiosperms has a polyphyletic origin and could be du...
Premise of the study: Storage oil (triacylglycerol) accumulates in tissues such as the embryo and en...
The combination of robust physiological models with “omics” studies holds promise for the discovery ...
Desiccation tolerance (DT) is defined as the ability to survive in the dry state and resume metaboli...
The combination of robust physiological models with "omics" studies holds promise for the discovery ...
International audienceGlobal warming and drought stress are expected to have a negative impact on ag...
Vegetative desiccation tolerance, or the ability to survive the loss of ~95% relative water content ...
Developing seeds accumulate late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins, a family of intrinsically di...
Buitink J, Leger JJ, Guisle I, et al. Transcriptome profiling uncovers metabolic and regulatory proc...
Includes bibliographical references.In angiosperms, desiccation tolerance, a genetic trait that enab...
The ability to survive vegetative-tissue desiccation, defined as the near complete loss (80-95%) of ...
Desiccation tolerance (DT) is the capacity to withstand total loss of cellular water. It is acquired...
There are numerous examples of plant organs or developmental stages that are desiccation-tolerant an...
In contrast to orthodox seeds that acquire desiccation tolerance during maturation, recalcitrant see...
The combination of robust physiological models with “omics” studies holds promise for the discovery ...
Desiccation-tolerance in vegetative tissues of angiosperms has a polyphyletic origin and could be du...
Premise of the study: Storage oil (triacylglycerol) accumulates in tissues such as the embryo and en...
The combination of robust physiological models with “omics” studies holds promise for the discovery ...
Desiccation tolerance (DT) is defined as the ability to survive in the dry state and resume metaboli...
The combination of robust physiological models with "omics" studies holds promise for the discovery ...
International audienceGlobal warming and drought stress are expected to have a negative impact on ag...
Vegetative desiccation tolerance, or the ability to survive the loss of ~95% relative water content ...
Developing seeds accumulate late embryogenesis abundant (LEA) proteins, a family of intrinsically di...
Buitink J, Leger JJ, Guisle I, et al. Transcriptome profiling uncovers metabolic and regulatory proc...
Includes bibliographical references.In angiosperms, desiccation tolerance, a genetic trait that enab...
The ability to survive vegetative-tissue desiccation, defined as the near complete loss (80-95%) of ...
Desiccation tolerance (DT) is the capacity to withstand total loss of cellular water. It is acquired...