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Elizabeth S. Sattely

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  72
Citations -  4202

Elizabeth S. Sattely is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Metathesis & Arabidopsis. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 63 publications receiving 2881 citations. Previous affiliations of Elizabeth S. Sattely include Howard Hughes Medical Institute & Boston College.

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Six enzymes from mayapple that complete the biosynthetic pathway to the etoposide aglycone

TL;DR: Production of the etoposide aglycone in tobacco and circumvent the need for cultivation of mayapple and semisynthetic epimerization and demethylation of podophyllotoxin are enabled.
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A Renewable Lignin–Lactide Copolymer and Application in Biobased Composites

TL;DR: The need for renewable alternatives to traditional petroleum-derived plastics has driven recent interest in biobased composite materials that are sourced from carbon-neutral feedstocks, such as Lignin this article.
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Highly efficient molybdenum-based catalysts for enantioselective alkene metathesis

TL;DR: The application of the new catalysts are demonstrated in an enantioselective synthesis of the Aspidosperma alkaloid, quebrachamine, through an alkene metathesis reaction that cannot be promoted by any of the previously reported chiral catalysts.
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Plant-derived coumarins shape the composition of an Arabidopsis synthetic root microbiome.

TL;DR: It is found that lack of coumarin biosynthesis in f6′h1 mutant plant lines causes a shift in the root microbial community specifically under iron deficiency, and a potential role for iron-mobilizing coumarins is demonstrated in sculpting the A. thaliana root bacterial community by inhibiting the proliferation of a relatively abundant Pseudomonas species via a redox-mediated mechanism.
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A new cyanogenic metabolite in Arabidopsis required for inducible pathogen defence

TL;DR: The results uncover a new branch of indole metabolism distinct from the canonical camalexin pathway, and support a role for this pathway in the Arabidopsis defence response, and establish a more complete framework for understanding how the model plantArabidopsis uses small molecules in pathogen defence.