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Samir V. Sawant

Researcher at National Botanical Research Institute

Publications -  82
Citations -  2068

Samir V. Sawant is an academic researcher from National Botanical Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Promoter. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 71 publications receiving 1721 citations. Previous affiliations of Samir V. Sawant include Indian Veterinary Research Institute & Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research.

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Development of a 63K SNP Array for Cotton and High-Density Mapping of Intraspecific and Interspecific Populations of Gossypium spp.

TL;DR: The produced intraspecific genetic map is the first saturated map that associates into 26 linkage groups corresponding to the number of cotton chromosomes for a cross between two G. hirsutum lines.
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CAMTA 1 regulates drought responses in Arabidopsis thaliana

TL;DR: The results demonstrate the important role of CAMTA1 in regulating drought response in Arabidopsis, thus could be genetically engineered for improving drought tolerance in crop.
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Conserved nucleotide sequences in highly expressed genes in plants

TL;DR: The characteristic TATA motif in the highly expressed plant genes is (T/C)(T/A)N2TCACTATATATAG, and most of these features are not present in the genes ubiquitously expressed at low levels in plants.
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EST-derived SSR markers in Jatropha curcas L.: development, characterization, polymorphism, and transferability across the species/genera

TL;DR: This is the first report of development of EST-SSRs in J.Curcas and will be valuable resource for future genetical studies, like construction of linkage maps, diversity analysis, quantitative trait locus/association mapping, and molecular breeding of J. curcas.
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High level expression of surface glycoprotein of rabies virus in tobacco leaves and its immunoprotective activity in mice

TL;DR: It is established that plants can provide a safe and effective production system for the expression of immunoprotective rabies virus surface protein and induced complete protective immunity in mice against intracerebral lethal challenge with live rabiesirus.