2 results match your criteria: "The University of TokyoChiba[Affiliation]"

Seasonal Analysis of Microbial Communities in Precipitation in the Greater Tokyo Area, Japan.

Front Microbiol

August 2017

Department of Computational Biology and Medical Sciences, Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, The University of TokyoChiba, Japan.

The presence of microbes in the atmosphere and their transport over long distances across the Earth's surface was recently shown. Precipitation is likely a major path by which aerial microbes fall to the ground surface, affecting its microbial ecosystems and introducing pathogenic microbes. Understanding microbial communities in precipitation is of multidisciplinary interest from the perspectives of microbial ecology and public health; however, community-wide and seasonal analyses have not been conducted.

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Specific cellular components including products of phosphatidylinositol (PI) metabolism play an important role as signaling molecules in stomatal responses to environmental signals. In this study, pharmacological inhibitors of a set of cellular components, including PI4-kinase (PI4K) and PI3K, were used to investigate stomatal closure in response to CO, darkness, and abscisic acid (ABA). Treatment with PAO, a specific inhibitor of PI4K, specifically inhibited the stomatal response to CO compared with that to darkness and ABA.

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