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Sadegh Balotf

Researcher at University of Tasmania

Publications -  19
Citations -  207

Sadegh Balotf is an academic researcher from University of Tasmania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Nitrate reductase. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 14 publications receiving 114 citations. Previous affiliations of Sadegh Balotf include Shiraz University & Murdoch University.

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Nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase, glutamine synthetase, and glutamate synthase expression and activity in response to different nitrogen sources in nitrogen-starved wheat seedlings.

TL;DR: The results of this study highlight the differential effects between the type and the amount of nitrogen salts on NR, NiR, GS, and GOGAT activities in wheat seedlings while potassium nitrate being more effective.
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How exogenous nitric oxide regulates nitrogen assimilation in wheat seedlings under different nitrogen sources and levels

TL;DR: Results reveal the possible role of NO and different nitrogen sources on nitrogen assimilation in Triticum aestivum plants and show a clear relationship between exogenous NO, N concentration and N forms in primary plant nitrogen Assimilation.
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Associations of NAM-A1 alleles with the onset of senescence and nitrogen use efficiency under Western Australian conditions

TL;DR: It is concluded that the function of NAM-A1a allele induces the onset of senescence with a positive effect on the NUE and its components under Western Australian conditions.
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Differential expression of nitrate reductase in response to potassium and sodium nitrate: realtime PCR analysis.

TL;DR: Both sodium and potassium nitrate, as inducers, had significant effects on both nitrate reductase activity and nitrate reducesase expression in low concentrations, probably due to nitrogen metabolite feedback inhibition and toxicity.
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Shotgun Proteomics as a Powerful Tool for the Study of the Proteomes of Plants, Their Pathogens, and Plant–Pathogen Interactions

TL;DR: This review is intended as a primer for biologists that may be unfamiliar with the diverse range of methodology for MS-based shotgun proteomics, with a focus on techniques that have been used to investigate plant–pathogen interactions.