RADA-dependent branch migration has a predominant role in plant mitochondria and its defect leads to mtDNA instability and cell cycle arrest and LEE J.Y.Įditorial on the Research Topic Plasmodesmata: Recent Progress and New InsightsĬHEVIGNY N., LOTFI F., LE BLEVENEC A., NADIRAS C., FERTET A., BICHARA M., ERHARDT M., DIETRICH A., RAYNAUD C. In vivo visualization of mobile mRNA particles in plants using BglGīURCH-SMITH T.M., HEINLEIN M. Virus genome-based reporter for analyzing viral movement proteins and plasmodesmata permeability LAZAREVA E., ATABEKOVA A.K., LEZZHOV A.A., MOROZOV S.Y., HEINLEIN M. In vivo aniline blue staining and semi-automated quantification of callose deposition at plasmodesmata Methods in Molecular Biology, Humana Press, New York,įunction of plasmodesmata in the interaction of plants with microbes and viruses Plasmodesmata - Methods and Protocols, 2nd edition Natural history-guided omics reveals plant defensive chemistry against leafhopper pests and GARCIA D.Ī NYN domain protein directly interacts with DECAPPING1 and is required for phyllotactic patternīAI Y., YANG C., HALTISCHKE R., PAETZ C., KESSLER D., BURKARD K., GAQUEREL E., BALDWIN I.T. SCHIAFFINI M., CHICOIS C., POUCLET A., CHARTIER T., UBRIG E., GOBERT A., ZUBER H., MUTTERER J., CHICHER J., KUHN L., HAMMANN P., GAGLIARDI D. The interactome of CLUH reveals its association to SPAG5 and its co- translational proximity to mitochondrial proteins HEMONO M., HALLER A., CHICHER J., DUCHÊNE A.M. GIP1 and GIP2 contribute to the maintenance of genome stability at the nuclear periphery SINGH G., BATZENSCHLAGER M., TOMKOVA D., HERZOG E., HOFFMANN E., HOULNÉ G., SCHMIT A.C., BERR A. and ZHU Y.Īrabidopsis CHROMATIN REMODELING 19 acts as a transcriptional repressor and contributes to plant pathogen resistance KANG H., LIU Y., FAN T., MA J., WU D., HEITZ T., SHEN W.H. Production et purification des protéinesĬatalytic activities, molecular connections, and biological functions of plant RNA exosome complexes.Tenants et aboutissants de l’infection virale chez la plante.Métabolisme et trafic des ARN dans la cellule végétale.Maintenance et ségrégation du génome mitochondrial.La voie de signalisation TOR dans le contrôle de la traduction.Interactions plantes-virus pendant le mouvement viral de cellule à cellule.Gibbérellines et adaptation à l’environnement.Fonctions cellulaires de la protéolyse ubiquitine-dépendante.Evolution et diversité du métabolisme des plantes.Biologie et biotechnologie des virus de la vigne.
Biogenèse et mode d’action des petits ARN.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Around a dozen live in Huntsville, and the rest are scattered around the country in places like Houston and Washington. Only between 30 and 40 members of the original von Braun team of 127 scientists are still living, Stuhlinger and Dannenberg estimated. He died Tuesday at a Huntsville hospital. Nowak's funeral was held Friday at Maple Hill Cemetery. Funeral plans were incomplete for Schuler, who died Friday at his home. Paetz' funeral is scheduled Monday at Spry Funeral Home. He was also in charge of flight instrumentation, guidance and control on rocket flights, and retired in 1969. Schuler was in charge of measuring instrumentation on the test stands and rockets during static firings, said Dannenberg.
At Redstone, he worked for the test branch and participated in the Redstone, Jupiter, Saturn 1 and Saturn V programs. He also worked in development of the V-2 and the Wasserfall, an anti-aircraft missile. Paetz was chief of the electrical section in Peenemuende, Germany, Dannenberg said. He directed assembly of systems for the Saturn 1 nose cones and Saturn V launch systems. Nowak, among the first members of the von Braun team to move to the United States, was assistant to the director of the manufacturing engineering lab during the Apollo program, said Konrad Dannenberg, a propulsion engineer for von Braun. "They were all three highly respected for their capability and their knowledge," said Ernst Stuhlinger, von Braun's chief scientist. Max Nowak, 89, of Huntsville, Heinrich Paetz, 88, of Grant, and Albert Schuler, 83, of Huntsville were original members of Wernher von Braun's team of engineers who developed the V-1 and V-2 rockets during World War II and then came to the United States under contract to the Army. HUNTSVILLE, Alabama (AP) - Three members of the German rocket team that helped propel Americans to the moon passed away during the last week in Alabama.