Publications by authors named "Komarnitsky I"

A middle repetitive sequence NPR18 was isolated from Nicotiana plumbaginifolia nuclear genome [8]. Sequences homologous to the repeat are dispersed through genomes of several Nicotiana species. Computer-assisted data analysis of NPR18 primary sequence reveals several features attributed to mobile genetic elements: an AT content higher than average for nuclear DNA of genus Nicotiana plants; a number of direct and inverted repeats.

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Twenty-nine cybrids possessing an Atropa belladonna nuclear genome and a Nicotiana tabacum plastome were selected from two independent protoplast fusion experiments. In contrast to the previously described reciprocal, green and fertile cybrids with a Nicotiana nuclear genome and an Atropa plastome (Kushnir et al. 1987), the plants obtained were totally chlorophyll-deficient.

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Mitochondrial (mt) DNA, isolated from different sugar beet populations, was analyzed using BamHI and EcoRI restriction enzymes. It was shown that plants possessing the new mtDNA types are revealed among O-type fertilizers quite frequently. Among cytoplasmic male sterile (cms) plants, which evolved during cultivation of O-type fertilizers, plants with altered mt genome were found.

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Leaf mesophyll protoplasts of Solanum pinnatisectum (2n=24) γ-irradiated at doses of 200 Gy and consequently unable to divide were fused with untreated protoplasts of genomic chlorophyll deficient mutant IvP 841-1 (2n=24) containing the germplasms of S. tuberosum and S. phureja.

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Protoplast fusion of Nicotiana tabacum (B6S3) crown gall cells and Atropa belladonna leaf mesophyll cells was carried out. Hybrids were selected for their capacity to grow on hormone-free media and to green in light. Shoots incapable of rhizogenesis were regenerated on the same media and grafted onto normal plants of different species.

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The polypeptide composition of Fraction I protein (ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase) prepared from leaves of two clones of the parasexual hybrid plant Arabidopsis thaliana + Brassica campestris as well as their parents was analyzed by isoelectric focusing. The protein in hybrid plants contained a heterogenous population of small subunits resulting from the expression of both Arbabidopsis and Brassica nuclear genes, whereas the large subunit polypeptides, and hence the functional chloroplast DNA, were from the Brassica parent.

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