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Institution

University of Missouri

EducationColumbia, Missouri, United States
About: University of Missouri is a education organization based out in Columbia, Missouri, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 41427 authors who have published 83598 publications receiving 2911437 citations. The organization is also known as: Mizzou & Missouri-Columbia.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results of this work show that ActiVin and Pycnogenol are promising additives for maintaining the quality and safety of cooked beef.

366 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
24 Aug 1928-Science

365 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work reviews the jasmonate signaling pathway with an emphasis on understanding how transcriptional responses are specific, tunable, and evolvable and explores emerging evidence that JAZ proteins integrate multiple informational cues and mediate crosstalk by propagating changes in protein-protein interaction networks.
Abstract: The plant hormone jasmonate coordinates immune and growth responses to increase plant survival in unpredictable environments. The core jasmonate signaling pathway comprises several functional modules, including a repertoire of COI1-JAZ (CORONATINE INSENSITIVE1-JASMONATE-ZIM DOMAIN) coreceptors that couple jasmonoyl-l-isoleucine perception to the degradation of JAZ repressors, JAZ-interacting transcription factors that execute physiological responses, and multiple negative feedback loops to ensure timely termination of these responses. Here, we review the jasmonate signaling pathway with an emphasis on understanding how transcriptional responses are specific, tunable, and evolvable. We explore emerging evidence that JAZ proteins integrate multiple informational cues and mediate crosstalk by propagating changes in protein-protein interaction networks. We also discuss recent insights into the evolution of jasmonate signaling and highlight how plant-associated organisms manipulate the pathway to subvert host immunity. Finally, we consider how this mechanistic foundation can accelerate the rational design of jasmonate signaling for improving crop resilience and harnessing the wellspring of specialized plant metabolites.

365 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Dutch Hunger Winter study provides an almost perfectly designed, although tragic, human experiment in the effects of intrauterine deprivation on subsequent adult health, and provides crucial support and fundamental insights for the growing field of the developmental origins of health and disease (DOHaD).
Abstract: In the early 1980s, David Barker and others noted a paradox: although overall rates of cardiovascular disease increase with rising national prosperity, the least prosperous residents of a wealthy nation suffer the highest rates. He and others proposed over a series of studies that an adverse fetal environment followed by plentiful food in adulthood may be a recipe for adult chronic disease, a claim referred to as the Barker Hypothesis. These studies generally correlated birth weight and other infant parameters to the incidence of adult disease. Detractors, including an editorial in BMJ in 1995, complained that “[e]arly nutrition is inferred indirectly from fetal and infant growth, and fetal growth especially is a doubtful surrogate measure” (1). Most of the epidemiological studies were also vulnerable to confounding factors, particularly social class, that influence both intrauterine and adult environment, which delayed acceptance of the hypothesis. In PNAS, Rooij et al. (2) present another chapter in the ongoing study of the children of the Dutch Hunger Winter, a key test of the hypothesis (2). They show that, in addition to the previously shown effects of food restriction in utero on metabolism and cardiovascular health, there are effects on age-associated decline of cognitive functions. In the winter and spring of 1944 after a railway strike, the German occupation limited rations such that people, including pregnant women, in the western region of The Netherlands, including Amsterdam, received as little as 400–800 calories/d. The famine affected people of all social classes and was followed by growing prosperity in the postwar period. Thus, the Dutch Hunger Winter study, from which results were first published in 1976, provides an almost perfectly designed, although tragic, human experiment in the effects of intrauterine deprivation on subsequent adult health. This study has provided crucial support and fundamental insights for the growing field of the developmental origins of health and disease (DOHaD).

365 citations


Authors

Showing all 41750 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Walter C. Willett3342399413322
Meir J. Stampfer2771414283776
Russel J. Reiter1691646121010
Chad A. Mirkin1641078134254
Robert Stone1601756167901
Howard I. Scher151944101737
Rajesh Kumar1494439140830
Joseph T. Hupp14173182647
Lihong V. Wang136111872482
Stephen R. Carpenter131464109624
Jan A. Staessen130113790057
Robert S. Brown130124365822
Mauro Giavalisco12841269967
Kenneth J. Pienta12767164531
Matthew W. Gillman12652955835
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023120
2022532
20213,698
20203,683
20193,339
20183,182