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Marina Dermastia

Researcher at University of Ljubljana

Publications -  78
Citations -  2100

Marina Dermastia is an academic researcher from University of Ljubljana. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phytoplasma & Grapevine yellows. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 72 publications receiving 1867 citations. Previous affiliations of Marina Dermastia include Jožef Stefan Institute & Brandeis University.

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'Bois noir' phytoplasma induces significant reprogramming of the leaf transcriptome in the field grown grapevine

TL;DR: The two-year-long experiment revealed that plant genes involved in primary and secondary metabolic pathways were changed in response to infection and that these changes might support phytoplasma nutrition.
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Cytometrical Evidence That the Loss of Seed Weight in theminiature1 Seed Mutant of Maize Is Associated with Reduced Mitotic Activity in the Developing Endosperm

TL;DR: “If you know a thing only qualitatively, you know no more than vaguely; if you know it quantitatively—grasping some numerical measure that distinguishes it from an infinite number of other possibilities—you are beginning to know it deeply.
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Isolation of bacterial endophytes from germinated maize kernels.

TL;DR: The germination of surface-sterilized maize kernels under aseptic conditions proved to be a suitable method for isolation of kernel-associated bacterial endophytes and inhibited fungal growth in vitro.
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Oxidative stress in duckweed (Lemna minor L.) caused by short-term cadmium exposure.

TL;DR: The mechanisms of plant defence against cadmium toxicity have been studied by short-term exposure of Lemna minor L. (common duckweed) to concentrations of CdCl2, which caused a gradual decrease of plant growth, increased lipid peroxidation, and weakened the entire antioxidative defence.
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Plant Genome Size Measurement with DNA Image Cytometry

TL;DR: It is proposed that two standards for quality control of nuclear DNA content measurement are used in plant DNA image cytometry: the coefficient of variation of the peak should be lower than 6%, and the 4C/2C ratio should be between 1.9 and 2.1.