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Topic: Glycine (plant)


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In the News (Fri 11 Dec 09)

  
  Plant Ecology Projects
The research is focussed on mechanisms accounting for the distribution of plants among soils of different chemical properties and the differing ability of plant species to modify their soil environment.
Glycine is also an abundant amino acid in soil, but it is not part of the osmotic regulation in microorganisms.
Plants that are adapted to nutrient-poor environments have been hypothesized to have low morphological plasticity in response to nutrient manipulation.
www1.ekol.lu.se /prog_rep/prog01-02/plantecol1.html   (2759 words)

  
 Glycine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Strychnine is an antagonist at ionotropic glycine receptors.
Glycine is a required co-agonist along with glutamate for NMDA receptors.
The LD50 of glycine is 7930 mg/kg in rats (oral),
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Glycine   (531 words)

  
 STCGEC: Literature
Plant regeneration from immature cotyledonous tissue cultures of soybean by somatic embryogenesis.
Plant regeneration from tissue cultures of soybean by somatic embryogenesis.
Plant regeneration from embryo-derived tissue cultures of soybean by somatic embryogenesis.
www.cropsoil.uga.edu /soy-engineering/SomaticEmbryogenesis.html   (1649 words)

  
 Amino Acids -- Crops
Glycine is the simplest amino acid, and is used in crop production as a chelating agent for micronutrients and has been used as a nitrogen fertilizer, at least on an experimental basis.
Glycine is one of the least stable amino acids, rapidly degrading into ammonia, amides, and aliphatic amines (Cheshire et al., 1990).
While glycine may serve as a useful model, it is seldom used by itself, and instead is used with other complexing amino acids to chelate micronutrients, with other denatured protein sources as a soil amendment, or as a moiety in a larger, usually synthetic, molecule used as an herbicide or a plant growth regulator.
www.omri.org /Amino_acid_crops.html   (3557 words)

  
 References - glycine and betaine - HORT640 - Metabolic Plant Physiology - Department of Horticulture and Landscape ...
Plant J. Alia, Kondo Y, Sakamoto A, Nonaka H, Hayashi H, Saradhi PP, Chen TH, Murata N 1999 Enhanced tolerance to light stress of transgenic Arabidopsis plants that express the codA gene for a bacterial choline oxidase.
Kiene RP, Williams LPH 1998 Glycine betaine uptake, retention, and degradation by microorganisms in seawater.
Plant J. Nandineni MR, Laishram RS, Gowrishankar J 2004 Osmosensitivity associated with insertions in argP (iciA) or glnE in glutamate synthase-deficient mutants of Escherichia coli.
www.hort.purdue.edu /rhodcv/hort640c/referen/glybet.htm   (16912 words)

  
 References - glycine decarboxylase - HORT640 - Metabolic Plant Physiology - Department of Horticulture and Landscape ...
Chandok MR, Ytterberg AJ, van Wijk KJ, Klessig DF 2003 The pathogen-inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) in plants is a variant of the P protein of the glycine decarboxylase complex.
Plant J. Navarre DA, Wolpert TJ 1995 Inhibition of the glycine decarboxylase multienzyme complex by the host-selective toxin victorin.
Plant J. Yasuno R, Wada H 1998 Biosynthesis of lipoic acid in Arabidopsis: cloning and characterization of the cDNA for lipoic acid synthase.
www.hort.purdue.edu /rhodcv/hort640c/referen/glydc.htm   (3306 words)

  
 Plant of the Month   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
Glycines are not the easiest of wildflowers to see in the bush.
Glycine tabacina, Variable Glycine have leaves where the middle leaflet is on a longer stalklet than the lateral leaflets.
Variable Glycine has a tendency to occur more in grassland areas but it is just as much at home in woodlands.
www.angelfire.com /mn/fieldnats/july304.htm   (494 words)

  
 Soybean Mapping Projects - North America
Plant and nematode genetic analysis to test for a gene-for-gene relationship between plant and parasite.
In addition, the plants of the mapping population will be classified for a number of conventional markers as well as for approximately 150 RFLP markers.
Eventually we may be able to tailor plants and/or their bacterial symbionts for particular environments, or extend the host-range of Rhizobium to non-legume plants.
www.nal.usda.gov /pgdic/Map_proj/soybean.html   (14237 words)

  
 References - osmoregulation - HORT640 - Metabolic Plant Physiology - Department of Horticulture and Landscape ...
Plant J. Deuschle K, Funck D, Hellmann H, Daschner K, Binder S, Frommer WB 2001 A nuclear gene encoding mitochondrial delta-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase and its potential role in protection from proline toxicity.
Plant J. Deutch CE, Hasler JM, Houston RM, Sharma M, Stone VJ 1989 Nonspecific inhibition of proline dehydrogenase synthesis in Escherichia coli during osmotic stress.
Plant J. Verslues PE, Bray EA 2004 LWR1 and LWR2 are required for osmoregulation and osmotic adjustment in Arabidopsis.
web.ics.purdue.edu /~drhodes/hort640c/referen/oreg.htm   (3931 words)

  
 BioMed Central | Full text | Generation and analysis of expressed sequence tags from NaCl-treated Glycine soja
Glycine soja (50109) is one of the highly salt tolerant species that grows in coastal regions.
The accumulation of osmoprotectants by either altering metabolism or increasing transport is an important process of plants for the adaptation to environmental stress [15].
Plants were grown at 25°C in a greenhouse with a photoperiod of 15 h light/9 h dark.
www.biomedcentral.com /1471-2229/6/4   (3082 words)

  
 Glycine: Free Encyclopedia Articles at Questia.com Online Library
Glycine is the only one of these amino acids that is not optically active, i.e., it does not have d- and l-stereoisomers.
Glycine is the only one of these amino acids that is not optically...incorporated into proteins.
SOYBEAN soya bean, or soy pea, leguminous plant (Glycine max, G. soja, or Soja max) of the family Leguminosae (pulse family), native to tropical and warm temperate regions of Asia...
www.questia.com /library/encyclopedia/glycine.jsp   (1645 words)

  
 PLANTS Profile for Glycine max (soybean) | USDA PLANTS
This plant can be weedy or invasive according to the authoritative sources noted below.
This plant may be known by one or more common names in different places, and some are listed above.
This plant is introduced to the United States from another country or countries.
plants.usda.gov /java/profile?symbol=GLMA4   (262 words)

  
 David Oliver
We have been investigating the enzymology of the enzyme that catalyzes this reaction, glycine decarboxylase, as well as how its expression is limited to leaves grown in the light.
Our studies on heavy metals in plants strive to isolate the genes responsible for resistance to the normal levels of metals found soils and to augment their expression by genetic engineering methods to make plants that are highly metal-resistant.
Finally we are studying how plants can be altered to change the products they make and their fitness for altered environments.
www.public.iastate.edu /~botany/oliver.html   (419 words)

  
 Ram J. Singh
Ancestors of 80 and 78-chromosome Glycine tomentella Hayata (Leguminosae).
Genomic relationships in the genus Glycine (Fabaceae: Phaseoleae): Use of a monoclonal antibody to the soybean Bowman-Birk inhibitor as a genome marker.
Inheritance of protease inhibitors in Glycine tomentella Hayata (2n=38), a perennial relative of soybean.
www.cropsci.uiuc.edu /pros/ramsingh   (1387 words)

  
 glycine — Infoplease.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
soybean - soybean, soya bean,or soy pea,leguminous plant (Glycine max, G. soja, or Soja max) of the family...
Genotypic variation for fatty acid content in selected Glycine max [crossed with] Glycine soja populations.
Evaluation of Perennial Glycine Species for Resistance to Soybean Fungal Pathogens That Cause Sclerotinia Stem Rot and Sudden Death......
www.infoplease.com /ce6/sci/A0821060.html   (331 words)

  
 Genetic manipulation of glycine decarboxylation -- Bauwe and Kolukisaoglu 54 (387): 1523 -- Journal of Experimental ...
the biochemistry and enzymology of glycine decarboxylation and
Glycine decarboxylase is confined to the bundle-sheath cells of leaves of C
The role of photorespiration in redox and energy balance of photosynthetic plant cells: a study with a barley mutant deficient in glycine decarboxylase.
jxb.oxfordjournals.org /cgi/content/full/54/387/1523   (6931 words)

  
 [No title]
C) in enzymic decarboxylation of glycine by plant leaf mitochondria in vitro.
Igamberdiev AU, Bykova NV (1995) Metabolic pathways of glycine and serine conversion in photosynthetic plant cell.
Igamberdiev AU, Khozhainova VN (1990) Pathways of acetate conversion in seedlings of woody plants.
home.cc.umanitoba.ca /~igamberd/files/publications.html   (2109 words)

  
 Thyme
Pink or white flowers, with the upper lip cleft, the lower one divided in three lopes.
It favors digestion, avoiding gastric and intestinal spasms, besides preventing flatulence (Infusion of a teaspoon of floriferous summits in a cup of water.
The essence of the plant increases appetite, being specially suitable in case of anorexia.
www.botanical-online.com /medicinalstimoangles.htm   (553 words)

  
 1995-1999
Mapping of the microsomal and plastid omega-3 fatty acid deaturases in soybean (Glycine max(L.) Merr.).
Phylogenetic utility of Histone H3 intron sequences in the perennial relatives of the soybean (Glycine: Subg.
Monoclonal Antibody as a Genome Marker in the Genus Glycine.
www.cropsci.uiuc.edu /faculty/hymowitz/genlab/references/1995.html   (1120 words)

  
 Faculty of Biological Sciences at BGSU
Purification and molecular analysis of an extracellular ?-glutamyl hydrolase present in young tissues of the soybean plant.
Purification and developmental analysis of an extracellular proteinase from young leaves of Glycine max.
Purification and developmental analysis of a metalloendoproteinase from the leaves of Glycine max.
www.bgsu.edu /departments/biology/people/faculty/graham.html   (340 words)

  
 Glycine (plant) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Glycine is a genus in the bean family Fabaceae.
The most well known species is the soybean (Glycine max).
Glycine species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species: The Engrailed, The Nutmeg and Turnip Moth have all been recorded on soybean.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Glycine_(plant)   (99 words)

  
 Plant Viruses Online - Glycine mosaic comovirus
First reported in Glycine clandestina; from the Blue Mountains, N.S.W., Australia; by Bowyer et al.
Glycine clandestina, G. tabacina - green mosaic, leaves malformation.
Dallwitz (1980) and Dallwitz, Paine and Zurcher (1993) should also be cited.
image.fs.uidaho.edu /vide/descr358.htm   (271 words)

  
 Soybean Plant
Ancient cultures have considered the soybean plant (Glycine max) to be an important food, for millenia.
SOY PROTEIN, derived from non-GMO soybean plants, has the highest concentration of amino acids of all the proteins.
This concentrated source of critical amino acids may help a bodybuilder spare muscle during a diet phase.
www.soyrust.org /soybean-plant.htm   (255 words)

  
 Plant Viruses Online - Glycine mottle (?) carmovirus
First reported in Glycine tomentella; from from Herberton, Queensland, Australia; by Behncken and Dale (1984).
Glycine max, Phaseolus vulgaris - chlorotic local lesions.
Virions found in all parts of the host plant; in cytoplasm and in nuclei (especially associated with the nucleolus and cytoplasmic invaginations of chloroplasts).
image.fs.uidaho.edu /vide/descr359.htm   (245 words)

  
 ARS : Kristin D Bilyeu
Chappell, A.S., Scaboo, A., Wu, X., Nguyen, H., Pantalone, V., Bilyeu, K.D. Characterization of the mips gene family in glycine max.
Plant Breeders Are from Mars and Molecular Biologists Are from Venus - (Abstract)
Bilyeu, K.D., Chappell, A.S. Plant breeders are from mars and molecular biologists are from venus [abstract].
www.ars.usda.gov /pandp/people/people.htm?personid=31011   (860 words)

  
 The ECP/GR Glycine database   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)
The European Glycine database was established in 1996, following the meeting of the ECPGR Working Group on Grain Legumes, held in Copenhagen, Denmark.
It is maintained by the N.I. Vavilov All-Russian Scientific Research Institute of Plant Production (VIR) and it is searchable on-line at the Internet server of the German Centre for Documentation and Information in Agriculture (ZADI).
Seed requests should be sent directly to the holding institutes.
www.ecpgr.cgiar.org /databases/crops/glycine.htm   (119 words)

  
 Sorting Glycine names
of seeds (green, olive and green, fl, red, white), flowers (white and purple), pods (dry and green) and plants at the Illustrated Legume Database, Japan.
of seeds, leaf, pods and plants at the Illustrated Legume Database, Japan.
Mabberley D.J. 1997, The Plant-Book : a Portable Dictionary of the Vascular Plants, 2d Edition, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, U.K., 2000, National Genetic Resources Program.
www.plantnames.unimelb.edu.au /Sorting/Glycine.html   (237 words)

  
 Bubblelicious Body Essentials - Scented Lotions
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In order to view our site in it's entirety, you must have Macromedia Flash Player installed.
If you do not, you can download it here!
www.bubbleliciousbodyessentials.com /oils.htm   (78 words)

  
 T13L16.11
The plant glycine-rich protein 2 (GRP2) sequences are described as components of the cell wall.
The frog and yeast sequences contain DNA-binding zinc-finger motifs.
is found in the plant sequences as are
nucleus.cshl.org /protarab/T13L16-11-annotation.html   (157 words)

  
 Record details
Gene silencing in transgenic soybean plants transformed via particle bombardment.
Department of Agronomy, N109 Agriculture Science Center Building North, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40546-0091, USA.
genes; genetic transformation; lines; plant diseases; plant pathogens; soyabeans; transgenic plants; gene silencing; Potyviridae; Potyvirus; soybean mosaic virus; Glycine (Fabaceae); Glycine max; plant viruses; plants; soybean mosaic potyvirus; Glycine (Fabaceae); Papilionoideae; Fabaceae; Fabales; dicotyledons; angiosperms; Spermatophyta; plants; viruses; plant pathogens; pathogens; potyvirus group; plant viruses
bch.biodiv.org /database/record.aspx?id=4642   (88 words)

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