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- 1From:BMC Plant Biology (Vol. 21, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground R2R3-MYB is a class of transcription factor crucial in regulating secondary cell wall development during wood formation. The regulation of wood formation in gymnosperm has been understudied due to its large...
- 2From:BMC Genomics (Vol. 22, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground Chloroplast transfer RNAs (tRNAs) can participate in various vital processes. Gymnosperms have important ecological and economic value, and they are the dominant species in forest ecosystems in the Northern...
- 3From:BMC Biology (Vol. 19, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground Mitochondrial gene transfer/loss is common in land plants, and therefore the fate of missing mitochondrial genes has attracted more and more attention. The gene content of gymnosperm mitochondria varies...
- 4From:EvoDevo (Vol. 13, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground Plant dispersal units, or diaspores, allow the colonization of new environments expanding geographic range and promoting gene flow. Two broad categories of diaspores found in seed plants are dry and fleshy,...
- 5From:The Botanical Review (Vol. 88, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe composition of fluids that mediate fertilization in cycads is described for the first time. Using tandem mass spectrometry, proteomes of two stages of fluid production, megagametophyte fluid and archegonial chamber...
- 6From:Biodiversity Data Journal (Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAbstract The leafminers on gymnosperms receive much less attention than those on either angiosperms or ferns. Given the distinctly different leaf shape and leaf venation found in gymnosperms, they would be expected to...
- 7From:BMC Plant Biology (Vol. 20, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground Gnetum is an economically important tropical and subtropical gymnosperm genus with various dietary, industrial and medicinal uses. Many carbohydrates, proteins and fibers accumulate during the ripening of...
- 8From:Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week2022 SEP 10 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Obesity, Fitness & Wellness Week -- Fresh data on Obesity, Fitness and Wellness are presented in a new report. According to news reporting originating in...
- 9From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 18, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedDuring the course of evolution, organisms have developed genetic mechanisms in response to various environmental stresses including wounding from mechanical damage or herbivory-caused injury. A previous study of wounding...
- 10From:Castanea (Vol. 87, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe state of Illinois has few natural areas remaining due to anthropogenic changes caused by agriculture, industry, and urbanization. This study investigates the seed plants at the greatest risk of extirpation from...
- 11From:Biogeosciences (Vol. 19, Issue 19) Peer-ReviewedUnderstanding the mechanisms that shape the geographic distribution of plant species is a central theme of biogeography. Although seed mass, seed dispersal mode and phylogeny have long been suspected to affect species...
- 12From:PhytoKeys (Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedAbstract Torreya dapanshanica X.F.Jin, Y.F.Lu & Zi L.Chen, a new species endemic to central Zhejiang, East China, is described and illustrated. This new species is most similar to T. jiulongshanensis (Z.Y.Li,...
- 13From:Geoscientific Model Development (Vol. 14, Issue 11) Peer-ReviewedAt the leaf level, stomata control the exchange of water and carbon across the air-leaf interface. Stomatal conductance is typically modeled empirically, based on environmental conditions at the leaf surface. Recently...
- 14From:BMC Genomics (Vol. 20, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground Small RNAs (sRNAs) are regulatory molecules impacting on gene expression and transposon activity. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are responsible for tissue-specific and environmentally-induced gene repression. Short...
- 15From:PhytoKeys (Issue 12) Peer-ReviewedAbstract The type of Cycas debaoensis Y.C.Zhong & C.J.Chen (Y.C.Zhong 8762 ) consists of nine duplicates in PE. Our new investigation of the type collection suggests that the type includes at least two different...
- 16From:PeerJ (Vol. 8) Peer-ReviewedGymnosperms such as ginkgo, conifers, cycads, and gnetophytes are vital components of land ecosystems, and they have significant economic and ecologic value, as well as important roles as forest vegetation. In this...
- 17From:BMC Plant Biology (Vol. 23, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground The complex physical structure and abundant repeat sequences make it difficult to assemble the mitogenomes of seed plants, especially gymnosperms. Only approximately 33 mitogenomes of gymnosperms have been...
- 18From:BMC Plant Biology (Vol. 22, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground Plants have the lifelong ability to generate new organs due to the persistent functioning of stem cells. In seed plants, groups of stem cells are housed in the shoot apical meristem (SAM), root apical...
- 19From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 16, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedMitochondrial genomes of vascular plants are well known for their liability in architecture evolution. However, the evolutionary features of mitogenomes at intra-generic level are seldom studied in vascular plants,...
- 20From:BMC Evolutionary Biology (Vol. 20, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedBackground Gymnosperms represent five of the six lineages of seed plants. However, most sequenced plant mitochondrial genomes (mitogenomes) have been generated for angiosperms, whereas mitogenomic sequences have been...