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Eric J. Stockinger

Researcher at Ohio State University

Publications -  38
Citations -  5838

Eric J. Stockinger is an academic researcher from Ohio State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Arabidopsis. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 38 publications receiving 5334 citations. Previous affiliations of Eric J. Stockinger include Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center & Michigan State University.

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Arabidopsis thaliana CBF1 encodes an AP2 domain-containing transcriptional activator that binds to the C-repeat/DRE, a cis-acting DNA regulatory element that stimulates transcription in response to low temperature and water deficit

TL;DR: It is concluded that CBF1 can function as a transcriptional activator that binds to the C-repeat/DRE DNA regulatory element and, thus, is likely to have a role in cold- and dehydration-regulated gene expression in Arabidopsis.
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Low temperature regulation of the Arabidopsis CBF family of AP2 transcriptional activators as an early step in cold-induced COR gene expression

TL;DR: It is proposed that cold-induced expression of CRT/DRE-containing COR genes involves a low temperature-stimulated signalling cascade in which CBF gene induction is an early event and theCBF gene family is not subject to autoregulation.
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A Retrotransposon-Mediated Gene Duplication Underlies Morphological Variation of Tomato Fruit

TL;DR: SUN, one of the major genes controlling the elongated fruit shape of tomato, was positionally cloned and found to encode a member of the IQ67 domain–containing family, and it is shown that the locus arose as a result of an unusual 24.7-kilobase gene duplication event mediated by the long terminal repeat retrotransposon Rider.
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Freezing-sensitive tomato has a functional CBF cold response pathway, but a CBF regulon that differs from that of freezing-tolerant Arabidopsis.

TL;DR: It is concluded that tomato has a complete CBF cold response pathway, but that the tomato CBF regulon differs from that of Arabidopsis and appears to be considerably smaller and less diverse in function.
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Transcriptional adaptor and histone acetyltransferase proteins in Arabidopsis and their interactions with CBF1, a transcriptional activator involved in cold-regulated gene expression

TL;DR: It is concluded that ARABIDOPSIS encodes HAT-containing adaptor complexes that are related to the Ada and SAGA complexes of yeast and proposed that the CBF1 transcriptional activator functions through the action of one or more of these complexes.