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Richard G. Stout
Researcher at Montana State University
Publications - 15
Citations - 1045
Richard G. Stout is an academic researcher from Montana State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dichanthelium lanuginosum & Heat shock protein. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 15 publications receiving 966 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Thermotolerance Generated by Plant/Fungal Symbiosis
Regina S. Redman,Kathy B. Sheehan,Richard G. Stout,Russell J. Rodriguez,Russell J. Rodriguez,Joan M. Henson +5 more
TL;DR: All plants studied in natural ecosystems are symbiotic with fungi, which obtain nutrients while either positively, negatively, or neutrally affecting host fitness, and plant adaptation to selective pressures is considered to be regulated by the plant genome.
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Redox activity at the surface of oat root cells.
TL;DR: Electron transport activity at the cell surface of intact oat seedlings and plasma membrane-enriched preparations from Avena roots indicate that more than one electron transport system is present at the plasma membrane.
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Heat-tolerant flowering plants of active geothermal areas in Yellowstone National Park.
TL;DR: A broad survey of most of the major geyser basins within Yellowstone National Park was conducted to identify the flowering plants which tolerate high rhizosphere temperatures in geothermally heated environments, finding five species of monocots and four species of dicots were repeatedly found.
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Microplate quantification of plant leaf superoxide dismutases.
TL;DR: Modification of a procedure using o-dianisidine as substrate that permits relatively rapid quantification of SOD activity in crude leaf extracts in a microplate format is described and provides a means to quantify S OD activity in relatively large numbers of plant samples.
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Heat- and acid-tolerance of a grass commonly found in geothermal areas within Yellowstone National Park
TL;DR: Surveys of geothermally-heated environments in Yellowstone National Park have revealed an exceptionally heat-resistant grass Dichanthelium lanuginosum, which expresses a low molecular weight protein that cross-reacted with heat shock protein antibodies.