Publications by authors named "A R Wellburn"

Glutathione (GSH), a major antioxidant in most aerobic organisms, is perceived to be particularly important in plant chloroplasts because it helps to protect the photosynthetic apparatus from oxidative damage. In transgenic tobacco plants overexpressing a chloroplast-targeted gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase (gamma-ECS), foliar levels of GSH were raised threefold. Paradoxically, increased GSH biosynthetic capacity in the chloroplast resulted in greatly enhanced oxidative stress, which was manifested as light intensity-dependent chlorosis or necrosis.

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Lipids were extracted from needles of Norway spruce plants of different provenances. The plants, seeds of which were originally collected from all over Europe, were grown at two sites in England at the same longitude but one 350 km north of the other. Significant correlations were observed between monogalactosyl diglyceride (MGDG) and digalactosyl diglyceride (DGDG) ratios on the one hand and, on the other, the lowest extreme winter temperature at the original site of seed collection (EWTS).

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There is clear potential for the genetic manipulation of key enzymes involved in stress metabolism in transgenic plants. However, the data emerging so far from such experiments are equivocal. The detailed analysis of stress responses in progeny of primary transgenics, coupled with comparisons with control transgenic plants that do not contain the GR transgene, allows us to take into account the possible variation in response to stress associated with regeneration of plants from tissue culture.

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