10 results match your criteria: "The University of Texas at Austin 78713[Affiliation]"
Plant Cell Rep
June 1998
Department of Botany, The University of Texas at Austin 78713, USA.
A procedure has been developed for isolating protoplasts from prothalli of Ceratopteris richardii which can be cultured and are capable of regeneration. Protoplasts were isolated from 2-week-old gametophytes in a medium containing wall-digesting enzymes in 0.5 M sucrose, followed by purification of the released protoplasts by floating them up into a 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhytochemistry
June 1997
Department of Botany, The University of Texas at Austin 78713, USA.
Two nonprotein amino acids, cycasindene and cycasthioamide, along with eight known nonprotein amino acids, were isolated from the seeds of Cycas revoluta Thunb. The structures of cycasindene and cycasthioamide were elucidated as 3-[3'-amino-indenyl-2]-alanine (1) and N-[glycinyl-alaninyl-11-thio]-5-one-pipecolic acid (2) by chemical and spectral methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFASGSB Bull
October 1995
Department of Botany, The University of Texas at Austin 78713, USA.
Light, through the mediation of the pigment phytochrome, modulates the gravitropic response of the shoots and roots of many plants. The transduction of both light and gravity stimuli appears to involve Ca(2+)-regulated steps, one or more of which may represent points of intersection between the two transduction chains. To be confident that Ca2+ plays a critical role in stimulus-response coupling for gravitropism, it will be important to identify specific targets of Ca2+ action whose function can be clearly linked to the regulation of growth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough the calcium requirement of phytochrome-mediated fern spore germination and early rhizoid growth is well established, the calcium-binding proteins that serve as transducers for these responses are not known. Here we report the presence of annexin-like proteins in germinating spores of Dryopteris filix-mas (L.) Schott and Anemia phyllitidis (L.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Physiol
January 1995
Department of Botany, The University of Texas at Austin 78713, USA.
A pea (Pisum sativum L.) nuclear enzyme with protein tyrosine phosphatase activity has been partially purified and characterized. The enzyme has a molecular mass of 90 kD as judged by molecular sieve column chromatography and by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlanta
March 1998
Department of Botany, The University of Texas at Austin 78713, USA.
Rhizoids of the fern Ceratopteris richardii Brogn. usually emerge 40 h after germination is initiated by light, and more than 90% of them emerge growing in a downward direction. However, when the spores are germinated on a clinostat, the emerging rhizoids show no preferential orientation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Physiol
June 1992
Department of Botany, The University of Texas at Austin 78713.
Almost all the polyamine-stimulated protein kinase activity associated with the chromatin fraction of nuclei purified from etiolated pea (Pisum sativum L.) plumules is present in a single enzyme that can be extracted from chromatin by 0.35 molar NaCl.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Physiol
July 1996
Department of Botany, The University of Texas at Austin 78713, USA.
Almost all the Ca(2+)-dependent protein kinase activity in nuclei purified from etiolated pea (Pisum sativum, L.) plumules is present in a single enzyme that can be extracted from chromatin by 0.3 molar NaCl.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Physiol
May 1995
Department of Botany, The University of Texas at Austin 78713.
A calcium-dependent protein kinase was partially purified and characterized from the green alga Dunaliella salina. The enzyme was activated at free Ca2+ concentrations above 10(-7) molar. and half-maximal activation was at about 3 x 10(-7) molar.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Space Res
December 1995
Department of Botany, The University of Texas at Austin 78713, USA.
Immunofluorescence techniques have been used to study the distribution of calmodulin in several tissues in etiolated corn (Zea mays, var. Bear Hybrid) seedlings. Uniform staining was seen in the background cytoplasm of most cell types.
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