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Romina Sellaro

Researcher at University of Buenos Aires

Publications -  18
Citations -  848

Romina Sellaro is an academic researcher from University of Buenos Aires. The author has contributed to research in topics: Shade avoidance & Phytochrome. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 17 publications receiving 651 citations.

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Cryptochrome as a sensor of the blue / green ratio of natural radiation in Arabidopsis

TL;DR: The length of the hypocotyl of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seedlings grown under controlled conditions decreased linearly with increasing blue/green ratios of the light within the range of ratios found in natural environments, supporting a role of the blue/ green ratio under natural radiation.
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Perception and signalling of light and temperature cues in plants

TL;DR: The sharing of mechanisms of action for two distinct environmental cues is to some extent unexpected, as it renders these responses mutually dependent, and many ecological contexts in which such a mutual influence could be beneficial.
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Light perception and signalling by phytochrome A

TL;DR: In etiolated seedlings, phytochrome A mediates very-low-fluence responses (VLFRs), which initiate de-etiolation at the interphase between the soil and above-ground environments, and high-irradiance responses (HIR), which complete de-ETiolation under dense canopies and require more sustained activation with far-red light.
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Synergism of Red and Blue Light in the Control of Arabidopsis Gene Expression and Development

TL;DR: The mechanism of synergism involves the promotion by cry of positive regulators of phyB signaling and the persistence of the light-derived signal into the night commits the seedling to a morphogenetic and physiological program consistent with a photosynthetic lifestyle.
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Repression of shade‐avoidance reactions by sunfleck induction of HY5 expression in Arabidopsis

TL;DR: It is shown that sunflecks are perceived by phytochromes A and B, and inhibit hypocotyl growth in Arabidopsis thaliana mainly if they occur during the final portion of the photoperiod.