Publications by authors named "W Schwab"

Article Synopsis
  • Plant glycosyltransferases (UGTs) help plants grow and live better by affecting their metabolism.
  • In a study of 28 plant species, researchers found that UGTs in tea plants expanded a lot, while some other gene groups shrank.
  • The study showed that some UGT genes help tea plants deal with weather conditions like cold and drought, and that tea growers may have changed the plants to make them taste better and stronger in cold weather.
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The lignan secoisolariciresinol (SECO) diglucoside (SDG) is a phytoestrogen with diverse effects. LuUGT74S1 glucosylates SECO to SDG, whereby only small amounts of the monoglucoside SMG are formed intermediately, which exhibit increased activity. To identify critical amino acids that are important for enzymatic activity and the SMG/SDG ratio, 3D structural modeling and docking, as well as site-directed mutation studies, were performed.

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Article Synopsis
  • The plant hormone salicylic acid (SA) is really important for plants to fight off diseases.
  • Scientists found a new compound called 2,4-DHBA that is related to SA, and its levels go up when plants are infected or treated with SA.
  • When certain genes are changed, it affects how much 2,4-DHBA plants can make and how well they can resist infections, showing that 2,4-DHBA helps tea plants stay healthy.
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Tea () flowers emit a large amount of volatiles that attract pollinators. However, few studies have characterized temporal and spatial variation in tea floral volatiles. To investigate the distribution of volatiles within tea flowers and their variation among opening stages, volatile components from different parts of tea flowers and different opening stages were collected by headspace solid-phase microextraction and analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry.

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Geraniol is an important contributor to the pleasant floral scent of tea products and one of the most abundant aroma compounds in tea plants; however, its biosynthesis and physiological function in response to stress in tea plants remain unclear. The proteins encoded by the full-length terpene synthase () and its alternative splicing isoform (-) could catalyze the formation of geraniol when GPP was used as a substrate , whereas the expression of - was only significantly induced by and sp. infection.

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