J
June I. Medford
Researcher at Colorado State University
Publications - 59
Citations - 2906
June I. Medford is an academic researcher from Colorado State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Synthetic biology & Meristem. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 58 publications receiving 2621 citations. Previous affiliations of June I. Medford include Monsanto & June.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Advancing Crop Transformation in the Era of Genome Editing
Fredy Altpeter,Nathan M. Springer,Laura E. Bartley,Ann E. Blechl,Thomas P. Brutnell,Vitaly Citovsky,Liza J. Conrad,Stanton B. Gelvin,David A. Jackson,Albert P. Kausch,Peggy G. Lemaux,June I. Medford,Martha L. Orozco-Cárdenas,David M. Tricoli,Joyce Van Eck,Daniel F. Voytas,Virginia Walbot,Kan Wang,Zhanyuan J. Zhang,C. Neal Stewart +19 more
TL;DR: The state of plant transformation is reviewed and innovations needed to enable genome editing in crops are pointed to, including a potential game-changer in crop genetics when plant transformation systems are optimized.
Journal ArticleDOI
Alterations of Endogenous Cytokinins in Transgenic Plants Using a Chimeric Isopentenyl Transferase Gene.
TL;DR: The effects of the increased levels of endogenous cytokinins in non-heat-shocked transgenic plants seemed to be confined to aspects of growth rather than differentiation, since no alterations in the programmed differentiation pattern were found with increased cytokinin levels.
Journal ArticleDOI
Molecular cloning and characterization of genes expressed in shoot apical meristems.
TL;DR: Transcriptional promoters from Arabidopsis clones were fused to the beta-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene and introduced into plants, and GUS expression was used to analyze temporal and spatial regulation of the promoters.
Journal ArticleDOI
Vegetative Apical Meristems.
TL;DR: A fascinating aspect of plant biology is that a small cell group is the origin of shoot systems as varied as redwood trees or Arabidopsis, and how these functions are integrated within the apical meristem to produce the shoot has been the question of many studies and provides continual intrigue.
Journal ArticleDOI
Normal and Abnormal Development in the Arabidopsis Vegetative Shoot Apex.
TL;DR: In this article, abnormal development of the Arabidopsis shoot apex is described for a number of mutants, including lesions in the shoot apex that do not show an apparent alteration in shoot apical meristem.