Publications by authors named "Karthikbabu Kannivadi Ramakanth"

If you ever forget to water your houseplant, you may find its leaves getting soft and droopy - if you water it again in time, the leaves may stiffen, spring back up, and resist gravity. During this recovery, plant cells absorb water and build up an intracellular pressure, called turgor pressure, similar to inflating a balloon. Turgor pressure is an intrinsic component of plant physiology, and its biomechanical role as the 'hydroskeleton' is generally appreciated either statically in structural stability, like leaves resisting gravity, or dynamically in rapid motions, like Venus flytrap snapping, Mimosa closing, or stomatal opening.

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Temperature has a profound influence on plant and animal development, but its effects on stem cell behavior and activity remain poorly understood. Here, we characterize the responses of the Arabidopsis root to chilling (low but above-freezing) temperature. Chilling stress at 4°C leads to DNA damage predominantly in root stem cells and their early descendants.

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