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Annika Hinze

Researcher at University of Freiburg

Publications -  7
Citations -  543

Annika Hinze is an academic researcher from University of Freiburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Meristem & Olfaction. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications receiving 430 citations.

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A Protodermal miR394 Signal Defines a Region of Stem Cell Competence in the Arabidopsis Shoot Meristem

TL;DR: This work identified miR394 as a mobile signal produced by the surface cell layer (the protoderm) that confers stem cell competence to the distal meristem by repressing the F box protein LEAF CURLING RESPONSIVENESS.
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Redundant and specific roles of the ARGONAUTE proteins AGO1 and ZLL in development and small RNA-directed gene silencing

TL;DR: Analysis of ago1 mutants with partially compromised AGO1 activity revealed that loss of ZLL function re-establishes both siRNA and miRNA pathways for a subset of A GO1 target genes, implicating ZLL as a negative regulator of AGO2 at the protein level.
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Vascular signalling mediated by ZWILLE potentiates WUSCHEL function during shoot meristem stem cell development in the Arabidopsis embryo

TL;DR: Stem cells are maintained in an undifferentiated state by signals from their microenvironment, the stem cell niche, and mutant and marker gene analyses suggest that during shoot meristem formation, ZLL functions in a sequential order with its close homologue AGO1, which mediates RNA interference.
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Mosquito brains encode unique features of human odour to drive host seeking

TL;DR: This paper showed that the human and animal odours evoke activity in distinct combinations of olfactory glomeruli within the A. aegypti antennal lobe, which is selectively tuned to the long-chain aldehydes decanal and undecanal.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mosquito brains encode unique features of human odour to drive host seeking

TL;DR: The authors showed that the human and animal odours evoke activity in distinct combinations of olfactory glomeruli within the A. aegypti antennal lobe, which is selectively tuned to the long-chain aldehydes decanal and undecanal.