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Larissa Irvin

Researcher at University of Nebraska–Lincoln

Publications -  4
Citations -  55

Larissa Irvin is an academic researcher from University of Nebraska–Lincoln. The author has contributed to research in topics: Grain quality & Gene. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 3 publications receiving 18 citations.

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Allelic variation in rice Fertilization Independent Endosperm 1 contributes to grain width under high night temperature stress.

TL;DR: Evidence is presented to support the role of Fie1 in grain size regulation by testing overexpression (OE) and knockout mutants under heat stress and results suggest that the allelic difference controlling grain width under HNT is a result of differential transcript‐level response of FIE1 in grains developing under H NT stress.
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Divergent phenotypic response of rice accessions to transient heat stress during early seed development.

TL;DR: The phenotypic variation in a set of diverse rice accessions for elucidating the HS response during early seed development revealed that all the tested accessions have delayed endosperm cellularization upon exposure to the transient HS by 96 HAF; however, the rate of cellularization was different among the accessions.
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Endoplasmic reticulum stress pathway mediates the early heat stress response of developing rice seeds.

TL;DR: In this paper, a series of non-overlapping heat stress treatments and found that young seeds are most sensitive during the first two days after flowering, and increased JA levels under heat stress may precede ER stress response as JA application promotes the spliced form of OsbZIP50, an ER response marker gene linked to IRE1-specific pathway.
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Rice Chalky Grain 5 regulates natural variation for grain quality under heat stress

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors used an image-based colorimetric assay (Red, R; and Green, G) for genome-wide association analysis to identify genetic loci underlying the phenotypic variation in rice grains exposed to heat stress.