Institution
Leibniz Association
Government•Berlin, Germany•
About: Leibniz Association is a government organization based out in Berlin, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Gene. The organization has 16586 authors who have published 35691 publications receiving 1095107 citations. The organization is also known as: Leibniz-Gemeinschaft & Wissenschaftsgemeinschaft Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz.
Topics: Population, Gene, Aerosol, Catalysis, Genome
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
Wageningen University and Research Centre1, Humboldt State University2, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven3, Agricultural & Applied Economics Association4, Leibniz Association5, University of Gloucestershire6, Polish Academy of Sciences7, University of Bergen8, Aberystwyth University9, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences10, Université Paris-Saclay11, Tuscia University12, Technical University of Madrid13, University of National and World Economy14
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define resilience of a farming system as its ability to ensure the provision of the system functions in the face of increasingly complex and accumulating economic, social, environmental and institutional shocks and stresses, through capacities of robustness, adaptability and transformability.
277 citations
••
TL;DR: It is shown that local ammonium supply to Arabidopsis thaliana plants increases lateral root initiation and higher-order lateral root branching, whereas the elongation of lateral roots is stimulated mainly by nitrate.
Abstract: Root development is strongly affected by the plant’s nutritional status and the external availability of nutrients. Employing split-root systems, we show here that local ammonium supply to Arabidopsis thaliana plants increases lateral root initiation and higher-order lateral root branching, whereas the elongation of lateral roots is stimulated mainly by nitrate. Ammonium-stimulated lateral root number or density decreased after ammonium or Gln supply to a separate root fraction and did not correlate with cumulative uptake of 15N-labeled ammonium, suggesting that lateral root branching was not purely due to a nutritional effect but most likely is a response to a sensing event. Ammonium-induced lateral root branching was almost absent in a quadruple AMMONIUM TRANSPORTER (qko, the amt1;1 amt1;2 amt1;3 amt2;1 mutant) insertion line and significantly lower in the amt1;3-1 mutant than in the wild type. Reconstitution of AMT1;3 expression in the amt1;3-1 or in the qko background restored higher-order lateral root development. By contrast, AMT1;1, which shares similar transport properties with AMT1;3, did not confer significant higher-order lateral root proliferation. These results show that ammonium is complementary to nitrate in shaping lateral root development and that stimulation of lateral root branching by ammonium occurs in an AMT1;3-dependent manner.
277 citations
••
Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ1, United States Environmental Protection Agency2, RWTH Aachen University3, Environment Canada4, Masaryk University5, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology6, Analysis Group7, VU University Amsterdam8, Leibniz Association9, Norwegian Institute for Air Research10, State University of Campinas11
TL;DR: Current experience with the EDA approach and the tools required are summarized, and practical advice on their application is provided, highlighting the need for proper problem formulation and giving general advice for study design.
276 citations
••
TL;DR: A genome-wide approach confirmed interactions that were previously observed by other methods as well as uncovered long-range interactions such as those among small heterochromatic regions embedded in euchromatic arms.
276 citations
••
Harvard University1, University of Göttingen2, Leibniz Association3, Nazarbayev University4, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention5, Saint Francis University6, American University of Beirut7, University of Geneva8, National Institute for Medical Research9, University of the East10, University of Porto11, Stellenbosch University12, Tribhuvan University13, National University of Benin14, Makerere University15, Eduardo Mondlane University16, University of Lausanne17, Kathmandu18, Boston University19, University of the Witwatersrand20, University of Birmingham21, Heidelberg University22, Public Health Foundation of India23
TL;DR: Given the high disease burden caused by hypertension in LMICs, nationally representative hypertension care cascades, as constructed in this study, are an important measure of progress towards achieving universal health coverage.
276 citations
Authors
Showing all 16595 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Helmut Sies | 133 | 670 | 78319 |
Mark Stitt | 132 | 456 | 60800 |
Norbert Schwarz | 117 | 488 | 71008 |
Matthias Beller | 113 | 733 | 46344 |
Matthias Steinmetz | 112 | 461 | 67802 |
Marten Scheffer | 111 | 350 | 73789 |
Erko Stackebrandt | 106 | 633 | 68201 |
Andreas Radbruch | 104 | 485 | 36872 |
Rajeev K. Varshney | 102 | 709 | 39796 |
Thomas J. Jentsch | 101 | 238 | 32810 |
Michael Schulz | 100 | 759 | 50719 |
Oliver G. Schmidt | 100 | 1083 | 39988 |
Rainer Waser | 99 | 927 | 48315 |
Paul Knochel | 99 | 2373 | 44786 |
Matthias Beller | 97 | 903 | 34480 |