2 results match your criteria: "464-8601 Japan Ryukoku University[Affiliation]"

GmPT7 was originally identified as an arbuscular mycorrhiza-inducible gene of soybean that encodes a member of subfamily I in the PHOSPHATE TRANSPORTER 1 family. In the present study, we established conditions under which a number of dwarf soybean plants complete their life cycles in a growth chamber. Using this system, we grew transgenic soybean with a GmPT7 promoter-β-glucuronidase fusion gene and evaluated GmPT7 expression in detail.

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Lipid droplets of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi emerge in concert with arbuscule collapse.

Plant Cell Physiol

November 2014

Graduate School of Bioagricultural Sciences, Nagoya University, Nagoya, 464-8601 Japan Ryukoku University, 67 Tsukamoto-cho, Fukakusa, Fushimi-ku, Kyoto, 612-8577 Japan.

Plants share photosynthetically fixed carbon with arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi to maintain their growth and nutrition. AM fungi are oleogenic fungi that contain numerous lipid droplets in their syncytial mycelia during most of their life cycle. These lipid droplets are probably used for supporting growth of extraradical mycelia and propagation; however, when and where the lipid droplets are produced remains unclear.

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