Publications by authors named "Ian M. Sussex"

Laser capture microdissection (LCM) is a technique by which individual cells can be harvested from tissue sections while they are viewed under the microscope, by tacking selected cells to an adhesive film with a laser beam. Harvested cells can provide DNA, RNA, and protein for the profiling of genomic characteristics, gene expression, and protein spectra from individual cell types. We have optimized LCM for a variety of plant tissues and species, permitting the harvesting of cells from paraffin sections that maintain histological detail.

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FQR1 is a novel primary auxin-response gene that codes for a flavin mononucleotide-binding flavodoxin-like quinone reductase. Accumulation of FQR1 mRNA begins within 10 min of indole-3-acetic acid application and reaches a maximum of approximately 10-fold induction 30 min after treatment. This increase in FQR1 mRNA abundance is not diminished by the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide, demonstrating that FQR1 is a primary auxin-response gene.

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The generation and analysis of plant chimeras and other genetic mosaics have been used to deduce patterns of cell division and cell fate during plant development and to demonstrate the existence of clonally distinct cell lineages in the shoot meristems of higher plants. Cells derived from these lineages do not have fixed developmental fates but rely on positional information to determine their patterns of division and differentiation. Chimeras with cells that differ genetically for specific developmental processes have been experimentally generated by a variety of methods.

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