5 resultados para Attracting talent

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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Parasitic and predatory arthropods often prevent plants from being severely damaged by killing herbivores as they feed on the plants. Recent studies show that a variety of plants, when injured by herbivores, emit chemical signals that guide natural enemies to the herbivores. It is unlikely that herbivore-damaged plants initiate the production of chemicals solely to attract parasitoids and predators. The signaling role probably evolved secondarily from plant responses that produce toxins and deterrents against herbivores and antibiotics against pathogens. To effectively function as signals for natural enemies, the emitted volatiles should be clearly distinguishable from background odors, specific for prey or host species that feed on the plant, and emitted at times when the natural enemies forage. Our studies on the phenomena of herbivore-induced emissions of volatiles in corn and cotton plants and studies conducted by others indicate that (i) the clarity of the volatile signals is high, as they are unique for herbivore damage, produced in relatively large amounts, and easily distinguishable from background odors; (ii) specificity is limited when different herbivores feed on the same plant species but high as far as odors emitted by different plant species and genotypes are concerned; (iii) the signals are timed so that they are mainly released during the daytime, when natural enemies tend to forage, and they wane slowly after herbivory stops.

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We prove the Regulat or Stochastic Conjecture for the real quadratic family which asserts that almost every real quadratic map Pc, c ∈ [−2, 1/4], has either an attracting cycle or an absolutely continuous invariant measure.

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In contrast to naive lymphocytes, memory/effector lymphocytes can access nonlymphoid effector sites and display restricted, often tissue-selective, migration behavior. The cutaneous lymphocyte-associated antigen (CLA) defines a subset of circulating memory T cells that selectively localize in cutaneous sites mediated in part by the interaction of CLA with its vascular ligand E-selectin. Here, we report the identification and characterization of a CC chemokine, cutaneous T cell-attracting chemokine (CTACK). Both human and mouse CTACK are detected only in skin by Southern and Northern blot analyses. Specifically, CTACK message is found in the mouse epidermis and in human keratinocytes, and anti-CTACK mAbs predominantly stain the epithelium. Finally, CTACK selectively attracts CLA+ memory T cells. Taken together, these results suggest an important role for CTACK in recruitment of CLA+ T cells to cutaneous sites. CTACK is predominantly expressed in the skin and selectively attracts a tissue-specific subpopulation of memory lymphocytes.

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Transmitting tissue-specific (TTS) protein is a pollen tube growth-promoting and attracting glycoprotein located in the stylar transmitting tissue extracellular matrix of the pistil of tobacco. The TTS protein backbones have a deduced molecular mass of about 28 kDa, whereas the glycosylated stylar TTS proteins have apparent molecular masses ranging between 50 and 100 kDa. TTS mRNAs and proteins are ectopically produced in transgenic tobacco plants that express either a cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S promoter-TTS2 transgene or a CaMV 35S-promoter-NAG1 (NAG1 = Nicotiana tabacum Agamous gene) transgene. However, the patterns of TTS mRNA and protein accumulation and the quality of the TTS proteins produced are different in these two types of transgenic plants. In 35S-TTS transgenic plants, TTS mRNAs and proteins accumulate constitutively in vegetative and floral tissues. However, the ectopically expressed TTS proteins in these transgenic plants accumulate as underglycosylated protein species with apparent molecular masses between 30 and 50 kDa. This indicates that the capacity to produce highly glycosylated TTS proteins is restricted to the stylar transmitting tissue. In 35S-NAG transgenic plants, NAG1 mRNAs accumulate constitutively in vegetative and floral tissues, and TTS mRNAs are induced in the sepals of these plants. Moreover, highly glycosylated TTS proteins in the 50- to 100-kDa molecular mass range accumulate in the sepals of these transgenic, 35S-NAG plants. These results show that the tobacco NAGI gene, together with other yet unidentified regulatory factors, control the expression of TTS genes and the cellular capacity to glycosylate TTS proteins, which are normally expressed very late in the pistil developmental pathway and function in the final stage of floral development. The sepals in the transgenic 35S-NAG plants also support efficient pollen germination and tube growth, similar to what normally occurs in the pistil, and this ability correlates with the accumulation of the highest levels of the 50- to 100-kDa glycosylated TTS proteins.