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Institution

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

EducationUppsala, Sweden
About: Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences is a education organization based out in Uppsala, Sweden. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Soil water. The organization has 13510 authors who have published 35241 publications receiving 1414458 citations. The organization is also known as: Sveriges Lantbruksuniversitet & SLU.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Oct 2001-Genetics
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the GA dose dependency of hypocotyl elongation is altered in mutants lacking GAI and RGA and proposed that increments in GAI/RGA repressor function can explain the quantitative nature of GA responses.
Abstract: The growth of Arabidopsis thaliana is quantitatively regulated by the phytohormone gibberellin (GA) via two closely related nuclear GA-signaling components, GAI and RGA. Here we test the hypothesis that GAI and RGA function as "GA-derepressible repressors" of plant growth. One prediction of this hypothesis is that plants lacking GAI and RGA do not require GA for normal stem growth. Analysis of GA-deficient mutants lacking GAI and RGA confirms this prediction and suggests that in the absence of GAI and RGA, "growth" rather than "no growth" is the default state of plant stems. The function of the GA-signaling system is thus to act as a control system regulating the amount of this growth. We also demonstrate that the GA dose dependency of hypocotyl elongation is altered in mutants lacking GAI and RGA and propose that increments in GAI/RGA repressor function can explain the quantitative nature of GA responses.

272 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a review of the attributes that evoke fear of crime in urban green spaces and highlight their complex interaction by adopting a social-ecological framework, which can help guide future research.

272 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated nitrogen dynamics and losses in household waste mixtures with different litter additives during composting, maturation and storage, and concluded that there is no obvious way to efficiently decrease nitrogen losses through addition of litter materials.

271 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A global study of 49 forests revealed that lower BP per unit photosynthesis in forests with low- versus forests with high-nutrient availability reflects not merely an increase in plant respiration, but likely results from reduced carbon allocation to unaccounted components of net primary production, particularly root symbionts.
Abstract: Trees with sufficient nutrition are known to allocate carbon preferentially to aboveground plant parts. Our global study of 49 forests revealed an even more fundamental carbon allocation response to nutrient availability: forests with high-nutrient availability use 58 ± 3% (mean ± SE; 17 forests) of their photosynthates for plant biomass production (BP), while forests with low-nutrient availability only convert 42 ± 2% (mean ± SE; 19 forests) of annual photosynthates to biomass. This nutrient effect largely overshadows previously observed differences in carbon allocation patterns among climate zones, forest types and age classes. If forests with low-nutrient availability use 16 ± 4% less of their photosynthates for plant growth, what are these used for? Current knowledge suggests that lower BP per unit photosynthesis in forests with low- versus forests with high-nutrient availability reflects not merely an increase in plant respiration, but likely results from reduced carbon allocation to unaccounted components of net primary production, particularly root symbionts.

271 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: To obtain a high frequency of regeneration, rapidly growing calli were transferred to media having a high cytokinin:auxin ratio as early as possible, usually 3 weeks after protoplast isolation.
Abstract: Protoplasts isolated from 4-day-old hypocotyls of various species of Brassica (Brassica napus, B. campestris and B. oleracea) produced callus with high efficiency in media containing casein hydrolysate and high concentrations of the auxin 2,4-D (4.5 μM). Cell division began after 24 h and 60% of the cells had divided after 48 h. In contrast, protoplasts isolated from stem and mesophyll of plants grown in vitro or in the greenhouse began to divide after a delay of 3–5 days. In these cases 40–50% of the cells had divided after 5 days as compared to 70% for hypocotyl protoplasts. To obtain a high frequency of regeneration, rapidly growing calli were transferred to media having a high cytokinin:auxin ratio as early as possible, usually 3 weeks after protoplast isolation. The average regeneration frequency for calli obtained from mesophyll protoplasts was 50%, while as many as 70% of the calli derived from hypocotyl protoplasts of B. napus regenerated plantlets on a medium containing zeatin (9.1 μM) and IAA (0.6 μM). On the same medium regeneration of Brassica oleracea was obtained. A low percentage of calli (1%) from Brassica campestris formed shoots when cultured on a combination of zeatin (4.6 μM), BA (4.4 μM) and IAA (0.6 μM).

271 citations


Authors

Showing all 13653 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Svante Pääbo14740784489
Lars Klareskog13169763281
Stephen Hillier129113883831
Carol V. Robinson12367051896
Jun Yu121117481186
Peter J. Anderson12096663635
David E. Clapham11938258360
Angela M. Gronenborn11356844800
David A. Wardle11040970547
Agneta Oskarsson10676640524
Jack S. Remington10348138006
Hans Ellegren10234939437
Per A. Peterson10235635788
Malcolm J. Bennett9943937207
Gunnar E. Carlsson9846632638
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023116
2022252
20212,311
20201,957
20191,787
20181,624