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Nicole Ferrière

Researcher at Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

Publications -  6
Citations -  190

Nicole Ferrière is an academic researcher from Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement. The author has contributed to research in topics: Somatic embryogenesis & Callus. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications receiving 182 citations.

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Recovery and regeneration of embryogenic cultures from female flowers of False Horn Plantain.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that somatic embryogenesis from immature flowers is suitable for genotypes of Musa with or without male buds, and Regeneration of plants was obtained either from somatic embryos directly isolated from embryogenic cultures or from suspensions after plating on a semi-solid medium.
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Morphohistological study of the different constituents of a banana (Musa 'AAA', cv. 'Grande Naine') embryogenic cell suspension

TL;DR: Five types of cellular aggregates have been characterised in embryogenic cell suspensions of banana and it appeared that aggregates II–IV of the suspension belong to the same development continuum which reproduces the initial phases of somatic embryo ontogenesis on semi-solid medium.
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Identification of differentially expressed cDNA sequences and histological characteristics of Hevea brasiliensis calli in relation to their embryogenic and regenerative capacities.

TL;DR: Five genes differentially expressed during induction in the embryogenic regenerating line (ER) could be used to distinguish between calli prior to induction, thereby enabling an early diagnosis of friable Hevea callus embryogenic potential.
Journal Article

Secondary somatic embryogenesis in Hevea brasiliensis (Müll. Arg.): An alternative process for long-term somatic embryogenesis

TL;DR: Embryogenic callus lines were established with the clones PB 260 and BRIM 703 for the new process with a higher frequency than those obtained with the MSE procedure, and the number of subcultures needed to establish callus Lines was shortened.
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Comparative histology of microprojectile-mediated gene transfer to embryogenic calli in japonica rice (Oryza sativa L.): influence of the structural organization of target tissues on genotype transformation ability

TL;DR: In this paper, the histology and time course of hygromycin-resistant callus formation from bombarded, seed embryo scutellum-derived embryogenic nodular units (ENUs) were investigated in four japonica rice cultivars (Taipei309, IDSA6, IR47686, IRAT361) exhibiting contrasting amenabilies in a microprojectile-mediated transformation system.