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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Human Calmodulin Methyltransferase: Expression, Activity On Calmodulin, And Hsp90 Dependence, Sophia Magen, Roberta Magnani, Sitvanit Haziza, Eli Hershkovitz, Robert Houtz, Franca Cambi, Ruti Parvari Dec 2012

Human Calmodulin Methyltransferase: Expression, Activity On Calmodulin, And Hsp90 Dependence, Sophia Magen, Roberta Magnani, Sitvanit Haziza, Eli Hershkovitz, Robert Houtz, Franca Cambi, Ruti Parvari

Horticulture Faculty Publications

Deletion of the first exon of calmodulin-lysine N-methyltransferase (CaM KMT, previously C2orf34) has been reported in two multigene deletion syndromes, but additional studies on the gene have not been reported. Here we show that in the cells from 2p21 deletion patients the loss of CaM KMT expression results in accumulation of hypomethylated calmodulin compared to normal controls, suggesting that CaM KMT is essential for calmodulin methylation and there are no compensatory mechanisms for CaM methylation in humans. We have further studied the expression of this gene at the transcript and protein levels. We have identified 2 additional …


Forage News [2012-12], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky Dec 2012

Forage News [2012-12], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky

Forage News

  • Farm Bureau Forage Commodity Conference
  • AFGC will hold its Annual Meeting this January in Kentucky
  • Forages at KCA
  • Kentucky Small Ruminant Grazing Conference
  • Heart of America Grazing Conference
  • Choose Forage Varieties Wisely
  • Hay Testing - A Wise Investment
  • Energy-Crop Calculator Available Online
  • Strong Hay Prices through Winter Maybe Longer
  • Dairy Herd Expansion Unlikely in 2013
  • What is Really Important?


Intraspecific Diversity In Sinningia Speciosa (Gesneriaceae: Sinningieae), And Possible Origins Of The Cultivated Florist's Gloxinia, David Zaitlin Nov 2012

Intraspecific Diversity In Sinningia Speciosa (Gesneriaceae: Sinningieae), And Possible Origins Of The Cultivated Florist's Gloxinia, David Zaitlin

Kentucky Tobacco Research and Development Center Faculty Publications

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The florist's gloxinia is a familiar houseplant in the Gesneriaceae, the botanical family that includes the African violet (Saintpaulia) and other ornamental species. The gloxinia's wild progenitor is Sinningia speciosa (Lodd.) Hiern, a Brazilian endemic. Although it has been cultivated for almost 200 years, little is known about the genetic diversity in S. speciosa, how the wild populations relate to one another or even where the cultivated forms originated. Using available wild collections, preliminary phenetic and phylogenetic investigations were conducted to elucidate the interspecific relationships within S. speciosa and to infer the origins of the cultivars.

METHODOLOGY: …


Morphological And Genetic Changes Induced By Excess Zn In Roots Of Medicago Truncatula A17 And A Zn Accumulating Mutant, Ricky W. Lewis, Guiliang Tang, David H. Mcnear Nov 2012

Morphological And Genetic Changes Induced By Excess Zn In Roots Of Medicago Truncatula A17 And A Zn Accumulating Mutant, Ricky W. Lewis, Guiliang Tang, David H. Mcnear

Plant and Soil Sciences Faculty Publications

BACKGROUND: Nutrient fluxes associated with legume-rhizobia symbioses are poorly understood and little is known regarding the influence of abiotic stresses on development and maintenance of N-fixing nodules and root system architecture (RSA). We examined effects of Zn on nodule development and structure, root architecture, and expression of nodulation-related miRNAs in Medicago truncatula and the mutant, raz (requires additional Zn).

FINDINGS: Excess Zn increased root and shoot associated Zn in both genotypes, however, raz plants had lower root associated Zn than WT plants. Roots of raz plants exposed to excess Zn had less volume, surface area, and total length compared to …


Plant Polyadenylation Factors: Conservation And Variety In The Polyadenylation Complex In Plants, Arthur G. Hunt, Denghui Xing, Qingshun Q. Li Nov 2012

Plant Polyadenylation Factors: Conservation And Variety In The Polyadenylation Complex In Plants, Arthur G. Hunt, Denghui Xing, Qingshun Q. Li

Plant and Soil Sciences Faculty Publications

BACKGROUND: Polyadenylation, an essential step in eukaryotic gene expression, requires both cis-elements and a plethora of trans-acting polyadenylation factors. The polyadenylation factors are largely conserved across mammals and fungi. The conservation seems also extended to plants based on the analyses of Arabidopsis polyadenylation factors. To extend this observation, we systemically identified the orthologs of yeast and human polyadenylation factors from 10 plant species chosen based on both the availability of their genome sequences and their positions in the evolutionary tree, which render them representatives of different plant lineages.

RESULTS: The evolutionary trajectories revealed several interesting features of plant polyadenylation factors. …


Forage News [2012-11], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky Nov 2012

Forage News [2012-11], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky

Forage News

  • Kentucky Grazing Conference
  • KFGC Presents Awards
  • Alfalfa Intensive Training Seminar
  • Kentuckian Featured at National Hay Convention
  • AFGC Conference in Covington
  • Kentucky's 2012 National Forage Spokesman to speak at Farm Bureau Forage Commodity Conference
  • Dr. Peter Ballerstedt to Speak at Forages at KCA During the KCA Convention
  • Neutral Detergent Fiber Digestibility (NDFD): A Good Predictor of Forage Quality
  • Where Does Nitrogen Fertilizer Come From?
  • The Cost of Pasture vs. Hay


Effects Of Long-Term Cattle Grazing And Woody Plant Encroachment On Soil Microbial Communities At The Santa Rita Experimental Range, Arizona, Cody Burton, Steven Archer, Rebecca L. Mcculley Oct 2012

Effects Of Long-Term Cattle Grazing And Woody Plant Encroachment On Soil Microbial Communities At The Santa Rita Experimental Range, Arizona, Cody Burton, Steven Archer, Rebecca L. Mcculley

Plant and Soil Sciences Presentations

Livestock grazing is considered a key driver of woody plant encroachment in dryland ecosystems worldwide. Woody plant establishment in these systems creates “islands of fertility,” in part by modifying erosional processes such that soil and plant litter are deposited beneath the shrub canopy, creating a nutrient rich soil/litter matrix that supports enhanced soil microbial biomass pools. In this study, we utilized a long-term grazing exclosure (>80 yrs) at the Santa Rita Experimental Range south of Tucson, Arizona and phopsholipid fatty acid analysis to quantify livestock grazing effects on soil microbial communities associated with the complex vegetative mosaic that characterizes …


Forage News [2012-10], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky Oct 2012

Forage News [2012-10], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky

Forage News

  • 13th Kentucky Grazing Conference
  • AFGC Returns to Kentucky - Register Soon
  • 33rd Kentucky Alfalfa Conference
  • Heart of America Grazing Conference
  • Hay Testing - A Wise Investment
  • UK Beef Cow Forage Supplement Tool - A Web Based APP
  • KFGC Field Day
  • Kentucky Grazing School
  • Bale Weight, Nutrient Removal, and Feed Value of Hay: An On-Farm Perspective
  • Beware of Cyanide (Prussic Acid) Poisoning
  • Nitrate Rumors can Kill Cattle


Cytochrome P450s And Uses Thereof, Joe Chappell, Lyle F. Ralston Sep 2012

Cytochrome P450s And Uses Thereof, Joe Chappell, Lyle F. Ralston

Plant and Soil Sciences Faculty Patents

The invention features isolated cytochrome P450 polypeptides and nucleic acid molecules, as well as expression vectors and transgenic plants containing these molecules. In addition, the invention features uses of such molecules in methods of increasing the level of resistance against a disease caused by a plant pathogen in a transgenic plant, in methods for producing altered compounds, for example, hydroxylated compounds, and in methods of producing isoprenoid compounds.


Forage News [2012-09], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky Sep 2012

Forage News [2012-09], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky

Forage News

  • KFGC Forage Field Day
  • Kentucky Grazing School
  • Beef Bash 2012
  • National Hay Association to Feature Kentucky Speakers
  • 13th Kentucky Grazing Conference
  • Partridge Pea or Chamaecrista fasciculate (Michx.) Greene
  • Forage Brassica Crops in Grazing Systems
  • Darkling/Mealworm Beetles can cause "Blister Beetle Scare"


Forage News [2012-08], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky Aug 2012

Forage News [2012-08], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky

Forage News

  • KFGC Field Day - Hart County - September 6
  • Drought and Forages
  • Choose the Best Variety for Fall Plantings
  • Plan to Attend the AFGC Meeting in Covington, KY - Jan. 7-9, 2013
  • High Nitrates Especially in Drought Stressed Corn
  • Biofuels will Continue to Drive Feed Prices
  • Mother Nature Throws a Wrench into 2012


Discovery Of Novel Dsrna Viral Sequences By In Silico Cloning And Implications For Viral Diversity, Host Range And Evolution, Huiquan Liu, Yanping Fu, Jiatao Xie, Jiasen Cheng, Said A. Ghabrial, Guoqing Li, Xianhong Yi, Daohong Jiang Jul 2012

Discovery Of Novel Dsrna Viral Sequences By In Silico Cloning And Implications For Viral Diversity, Host Range And Evolution, Huiquan Liu, Yanping Fu, Jiatao Xie, Jiasen Cheng, Said A. Ghabrial, Guoqing Li, Xianhong Yi, Daohong Jiang

Plant Pathology Faculty Publications

Genome sequence of viruses can contribute greatly to the study of viral evolution, diversity and the interaction between viruses and hosts. Traditional molecular cloning methods for obtaining RNA viral genomes are time-consuming and often difficult because many viruses occur in extremely low titers. DsRNA viruses in the families, Partitiviridae, Totiviridae, Endornaviridae, Chrysoviridae, and other related unclassified dsRNA viruses are generally associated with symptomless or persistent infections of their hosts. These characteristics indicate that samples or materials derived from eukaryotic organisms used to construct cDNA libraries and EST sequencing might carry these viruses, which were not easily detected by the researchers. …


Reproductive Characteristics Of A Populus Euphratica Population And Prospects For Its Restoration In China, Dechang Cao, Jingwen Li, Zhenying Huang, Carol C. Baskin, Jerry M. Baskin, Peng Hao, Weilei Zhou, Junqing Li Jul 2012

Reproductive Characteristics Of A Populus Euphratica Population And Prospects For Its Restoration In China, Dechang Cao, Jingwen Li, Zhenying Huang, Carol C. Baskin, Jerry M. Baskin, Peng Hao, Weilei Zhou, Junqing Li

Biology Faculty Publications

Populus euphratica is a dominant tree in riparian ecosystems in arid areas of northwest China, but it fails to regenerate in these systems. This study evaluates causes for the failure of sexual and asexual regeneration of this species in the wild. P. euphratica disperses as many as 85743 seeds/m2 during summer, and the seeds germinate to 92.0% in distilled water and to 60.8% on silt. However, very few seeds (3.6%) can germinate on unflooded soil. The seed-rain season is prolonged by temporal variability in seed dispersal among individuals, which ensures that seedling emergence can occur during favorable conditions (i.e., …


Utility Of Phylloplanins As Antibiotics, Selective Fungicides And For Enhancing Microbial Resistance In Plants, George Wagner, Ryan Sheperd Jul 2012

Utility Of Phylloplanins As Antibiotics, Selective Fungicides And For Enhancing Microbial Resistance In Plants, George Wagner, Ryan Sheperd

Plant and Soil Sciences Faculty Patents

The present invention relates to plant proteins produced by a plant's epidermal layer that contribute to the innate pest/disease resistance of the plant (“phylloplanins”), compositions comprising the phylloplanins and methods of using them. In particular the methods relate to inhibiting or preventing microbial, e.g., fungal or bacterial, growth on a subject, organism or surface by administering a phylloplanin. The invention also relates to transformed host cells that produce phylloplanins, and to transgenic plants producing phylloplanins conferring increased resistance to microbial infections/growth.


Forage News [2012-07], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky Jul 2012

Forage News [2012-07], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky

Forage News

  • Drought and Forages
  • Kentucky Hay Grower Wins National Hay Awards
  • KFGC Field Day to be in Hart County
  • Native Warm-Season Grasses In-Service Training
  • AFGC National Tour
  • If Baling Hay Wet, Watch for Fires
  • Custom Grazing of Stocker Cattle
  • AFGC 2013 Annual Conference
  • AFGC 2013 National Competitions
  • Reducing Energy Use in Production Agriculture
  • Ohio State Alfalfa Enterprise Budgets Online
  • The Diverse Structure and Organization of U.S. Beef Cow-Calf Farms


Plants Having An Enhanced Resistance To Necrotrophic Pathogens And Method Of Making Same, Pradeep Kachroo, Aardra Kachroo Jun 2012

Plants Having An Enhanced Resistance To Necrotrophic Pathogens And Method Of Making Same, Pradeep Kachroo, Aardra Kachroo

Plant Pathology Faculty Patents

A method for enhancing resistance to necrotrophic and/or hemibiotrophic pathogens by overexpressing glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase using an expression vector in a plant species. For example, the present method can be used to enhance resistance to C. higginsianum by overexpressing glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase in a plant such as Arabidopsis plant, using an expression vector in a plant.


Evolutionary Genomics Of Mycovirus-Related Dsrna Viruses Reveals Cross-Family Horizontal Gene Transfer And Evolution Of Diverse Viral Lineages, Huiquan Liu, Yanping Fu, Jiatao Xie, Jiasen Cheng, Said A. Ghabrial, Guoqing Li, Youliang Peng, Xianhong Yi, Daohong Jiang Jun 2012

Evolutionary Genomics Of Mycovirus-Related Dsrna Viruses Reveals Cross-Family Horizontal Gene Transfer And Evolution Of Diverse Viral Lineages, Huiquan Liu, Yanping Fu, Jiatao Xie, Jiasen Cheng, Said A. Ghabrial, Guoqing Li, Youliang Peng, Xianhong Yi, Daohong Jiang

Plant Pathology Faculty Publications

BACKGROUND: Double-stranded (ds) RNA fungal viruses are typically isometric single-shelled particles that are classified into three families, Totiviridae, Partitiviridae and Chrysoviridae, the members of which possess monopartite, bipartite and quadripartite genomes, respectively. Recent findings revealed that mycovirus-related dsRNA viruses are more diverse than previously recognized. Although an increasing number of viral complete genomic sequences have become available, the evolution of these diverse dsRNA viruses remains to be clarified. This is particularly so since there is little evidence for horizontal gene transfer (HGT) among dsRNA viruses.

RESULTS: In this study, we report the molecular properties of two novel dsRNA mycoviruses that …


Sesquiterpene Synthase Gene And Protein, Joe Chappell, Bryan Greenhagen Jun 2012

Sesquiterpene Synthase Gene And Protein, Joe Chappell, Bryan Greenhagen

Plant and Soil Sciences Faculty Patents

The invention relates to sesquiterpene synthases and methods for their production and use. Particularly, the invention provides nucleic acids comprising the nucleotide sequence of citrus valencene synthase (CVS) which codes for at least one CVS. The invention further provides nucleic acids comprising the nucleotide sequence coding for amino acid residues forming the tier 1 and tier 2 domains of CVS. The invention also provides for methods of making and using the nucleic acids and amino acids of the current invention.


Forage News [2012-06], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky Jun 2012

Forage News [2012-06], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky

Forage News

  • Advanced Grazing School
  • Measuring the Moisture Content of Forage Using a Microwave Oven
  • Thin Alfalfa Plantings: Deciding when to give up
  • AFGC Forage Tour
  • Kentucky Beef Cattle Market Update
  • Thought for the Day


Identification Of Late Embryogenesis Abundant (Lea) Protein Putative Interactors Using Phage Display, Rekha Kushwaha, Taylor D. Lloyd, Kim R. Schäfermeyer, Santosh Kumar, A. Bruce Downie May 2012

Identification Of Late Embryogenesis Abundant (Lea) Protein Putative Interactors Using Phage Display, Rekha Kushwaha, Taylor D. Lloyd, Kim R. Schäfermeyer, Santosh Kumar, A. Bruce Downie

Horticulture Faculty Publications

Arabidopsis thaliana seeds without functional SEED MATURATION PROTEIN1 (SMP1), a boiling soluble protein predicted to be of intrinsic disorder, presumed to be a LATE EMBRYOGENESIS ABUNDANT (LEA) family protein based on sequence homology, do not enter secondary dormancy after 3 days at 40 °C. We hypothesized that SMP1 may protect a heat labile protein involved in the promotion of secondary dormancy. Recombinant SMP1 and GmPM28, its soybean (Glycine max), LEA4 homologue, protected the labile GLUCOSE-6-PHOSPHATE DEHYROGENASE enzyme from heat stress, as did a known protectant, Bovine Serum Albumin, whether the LEA protein was in solution or attached to the bottom …


Forage News [2012-05], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky May 2012

Forage News [2012-05], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky

Forage News

  • 4th Annual Equine Farm & Facilities Expo
  • Grazing School
  • In Search of 300-Day Grazing
  • Farmland Prices Expected to Keep Rising
  • Record Prices, Low Numbers: Where Are We?
  • Harvesting Summer Annual Grasses for Hay


Seed Mucilage Improves Seedling Emergence Of A Sand Desert Shrub, Xuejun Yang, Carol C. Baskin, Jerry M. Baskin, Guangzheng Liu, Zhenying Huang Apr 2012

Seed Mucilage Improves Seedling Emergence Of A Sand Desert Shrub, Xuejun Yang, Carol C. Baskin, Jerry M. Baskin, Guangzheng Liu, Zhenying Huang

Biology Faculty Publications

The success of seedling establishment of desert plants is determined by seedling emergence response to an unpredictable precipitation regime. Sand burial is a crucial and frequent environmental stress that impacts seedling establishment on sand dunes. However, little is known about the ecological role of seed mucilage in seedling emergence in arid sandy environments. We hypothesized that seed mucilage enhances seedling emergence in a low precipitation regime and under conditions of sand burial. In a greenhouse experiment, two types of Artemisia sphaerocephala achenes (intact and demucilaged) were exposed to different combinations of burial depth (0, 5, 10, 20, 40 and 60 …


Forage News [2012-04], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky Apr 2012

Forage News [2012-04], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky

Forage News

  • Kentucky Grazing School Just Days Away
  • Grazing School Graduate Featured on U.K. YouTube
  • Kentucky Forages on YouTube
  • Kentucky Grazing Conference
  • Kentucky Alfalfa Conference
  • Master Grazer Website
  • Advanced Grazing School
  • Grazing for Profit with Sheep
  • Expect Early Alfalfa Weevil Feeding
  • New Economics Favor Better Forage Management. Is it a New Age for Forage?
  • 10 Herbicide Application Mistakes
  • Evaluation of Maturity of Switchgrass Hay for Feeding Beef Steers in Kentucky
  • Is Cheap Seed Really a Good Buy?


Sustainable Agriculture Undergraduate Degree Programs: A Land-Grant University Mission, Krista L. Jacobsen, Kim L. Niewolny, Michelle S. Schroeder-Moreno, Mark Van Horn, Alison H. Harmon, Yolanda H. Chen Fanslow, Mark A. Williams, Damian Parr Apr 2012

Sustainable Agriculture Undergraduate Degree Programs: A Land-Grant University Mission, Krista L. Jacobsen, Kim L. Niewolny, Michelle S. Schroeder-Moreno, Mark Van Horn, Alison H. Harmon, Yolanda H. Chen Fanslow, Mark A. Williams, Damian Parr

Horticulture Faculty Publications

There has been considerable growth in the number undergraduate degree programs in sustainable agriculture (SA) in universities and colleges across the country in the past 25 years. As a subset of this national trend, land-grant universities (LGUs) are emerging as catalysts in innovative SA program development, in part due to the LGU tripartite mission of education, extension, and research. This mission compels LGUs to develop undergraduate degree offerings to engage student, faculty, and community stakeholders who are increasingly interested in SA. In this article, which is an outcome of a gathering of faculty, staff and students from SA programs at …


Modified Rubisco Large Subunit N-Methyltransferase Useful For Targeting Molecules To The Active-Site Vicinity Of Ribulose-1,5-Bisphosphate, Robert L. Houtz Mar 2012

Modified Rubisco Large Subunit N-Methyltransferase Useful For Targeting Molecules To The Active-Site Vicinity Of Ribulose-1,5-Bisphosphate, Robert L. Houtz

Horticulture Faculty Patents

The present invention generally relates to a modified Rubisco large subunit εN-Methyltransferase (Rubisco LSMT, or RLSMT). The present invention also relates to a modified RLSMT-carbonic anhydrase (RLSMT-CA). This modified RLSMT-CA improves the efficiency of the reduction of CO2 during photosynthesis, which may increase plant growth rates. The present invention also relates to nucleic acids encoding the modified RLSMT-CA or modified RLSMT. Also, the present invention relates to cells including the modified RLSMT-CA or modified RLSMT, plants containing the modified RLSMT-CA or modified RLSMT, and methods using compositions of the present invention. In addition, the present invention relates to …


Grasslands And Carbon: Processes And Trends, Rebecca L. Mcculley Mar 2012

Grasslands And Carbon: Processes And Trends, Rebecca L. Mcculley

Plant and Soil Sciences Presentations

Grasslands, which make up 30% of the U.S. land surface, store significant amounts of carbon belowground in roots and soils. Learn how disturbances such as drought, grazing, fire and tillage can significantly impact the grassland carbon balance.

Dr. Rebecca McCulley of the University of Kentucky, Dept. of Plant & Soil Sciences, talks about grasslands and the way they store and process carbon. Grasslands make up about 30 percent of the North American surface. Grasslands differ from forests in many ways, but from a carbon perspective they store a much greater proportion of the carbon than they take in in any …


Development And Functional Analysis Of Novel Genetic Promoters Using Dna Shuffling, Hybridization And A Combination Thereof, Rajiv Ranjan, Sunita Patro, Bhubaneswar Pradhan, Alok Kumar, Indu B. Maiti, Nrisingha Dey Mar 2012

Development And Functional Analysis Of Novel Genetic Promoters Using Dna Shuffling, Hybridization And A Combination Thereof, Rajiv Ranjan, Sunita Patro, Bhubaneswar Pradhan, Alok Kumar, Indu B. Maiti, Nrisingha Dey

Kentucky Tobacco Research and Development Center Faculty Publications

BACKGROUND: Development of novel synthetic promoters with enhanced regulatory activity is of great value for a diverse range of plant biotechnology applications.

METHODOLOGY: Using the Figwort mosaic virus full-length transcript promoter (F) and the sub-genomic transcript promoter (FS) sequences, we generated two single shuffled promoter libraries (LssF and LssFS), two multiple shuffled promoter libraries (LmsFS-F and LmsF-FS), two hybrid promoters (FuasFScp and FSuasFcp) and two hybrid-shuffled promoter libraries (LhsFuasFScp and LhsFSuasFcp). Transient expression activities of approximately 50 shuffled promoter clones from each of these libraries were assayed in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum cv. Xanthi) protoplasts. It was observed that most …


What Controls The Abundance Of Tall Fescue In Native Grassland Restorations In Kentucky?, Rebecca L. Mcculley, Sarah Hall, Ben Leffew Mar 2012

What Controls The Abundance Of Tall Fescue In Native Grassland Restorations In Kentucky?, Rebecca L. Mcculley, Sarah Hall, Ben Leffew

Plant and Soil Sciences Presentations

No abstract provided.


Forage News [2012-03], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky Mar 2012

Forage News [2012-03], Department Of Plant And Soil Sciences, University Of Kentucky

Forage News

  • Kentucky Alfalfa Conference
  • Kentucky Alfalfa Awards
  • Alfalfa Hay Awards
  • Kentucky Grazing School
  • Cool Season Grass Workshop May 16th
  • Attend the AFGC Summer Tour - May 17-18
  • Saturated Fat and Cholesterol: Health Hazards or Vital Nutrients?
  • Hay Contest Rules and Information
  • The Relationship of Yield and Digestibility in Commonly Used Summer Annual Grasses
  • Determining the Effect of Mowing Height and Fertility on Orchardgrass Yield and Persistence
  • Extension's Response to the Fescue Endophyte Problem


Alteration Of Tobacco Alkaloid Content Through Modification Of Specific Cytochrome P450 Genes, Ralph E. Dewey, Balaz Siminszky, Steven W. Bowen, Lily Gavilano Feb 2012

Alteration Of Tobacco Alkaloid Content Through Modification Of Specific Cytochrome P450 Genes, Ralph E. Dewey, Balaz Siminszky, Steven W. Bowen, Lily Gavilano

Plant and Soil Sciences Faculty Patents

Compositions and methods for reducing the level of nornicotine and N′-nitrosonornicotine (NNN) in Nicotiana plants and plant parts thereof are provided. The compositions comprise isolated polynucleotides and polypeptides for cytochrome P450s that are involved in the metabolic conversion of nicotine to nornicotine in these plants. Expression cassettes, vectors, plants, and plant parts thereof comprising inhibitory sequences that target expression or function of the disclosed cytochrome P450 polypeptides are also provided. Methods for the use of these novel sequences to inhibit expression or function of cytochrome P450 polypeptides involved in this metabolic conversion are also provided. The methods find use in …