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Rongda Qu

Researcher at North Carolina State University

Publications -  55
Citations -  2400

Rongda Qu is an academic researcher from North Carolina State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Callus & Gene. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 55 publications receiving 2176 citations. Previous affiliations of Rongda Qu include Montana State University.

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Improved biomass productivity and water use efficiency under water deficit conditions in transgenic wheat constitutively expressing the barley HVA1 gene

TL;DR: Results of this study indicate that growth characteristics were improved in transgenic wheat plants constitutively expressing the barley HVA1 gene in response to soil water deficit.
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Somatic embryogenesis and plant regeneration of turf-type bermudagrass: Effect of 6-benzyladenine in callus induction medium

TL;DR: Tissue culture responses of young inflorescences of a hybrid bermudagrass cultivar `Tifgreen' (Cynodon dactylon×Cynodocus transvaalensis) and a common bermUDagrasses cultivar`Savannah' (cynodondactylon) were investigated and formed a compact, nodular embryogenic structure which was highly regenerable and morphologically normal.
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A photorespiratory bypass increases plant growth and seed yield in biofuel crop Camelina sativa.

TL;DR: By reducing photorespiratory losses and increasing photosynthetic CO2 fixation rates, transgenic plants show dramatic increases in seed yield, and the bypass approach may have significant impact on increasing agricultural productivity for C3 crops.
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High throughput Agrobacterium-mediated switchgrass transformation

Ruyu Li, +1 more
- 01 Mar 2011 - 
TL;DR: The new system substantially improved switchgrass transformation efficiency and will significantly contribute to the genetic improvement of this important biofuel feedstock via biotechnological approach.
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Expression enhancement of a rice polyubiquitin gene promoter.

TL;DR: The resultant 5′ regulatory sequence, consisting of the rubi3 promoter, 5′ UTR exon and intron, and the mutated first 9 nt coding sequence, has an activity nearly 90-fold greater than the rubu3 promoter only (without the 5′UTR intron), and 2.2-foldgreater than the maize Ubi1 gene promoter (including its 5″ UTR introns).