HIGHLIGHTS
- who: Mohamed Hazman from the (UNIVERSITY) have published the paper: Characterization of Jasmonoyl-Isoleucine (JA-Ile) Hormonal Catabolic Pathways in Rice upon Wounding and Salt Stress, in the Journal: (JOURNAL)
- what: The authors explored rice JA-Ile catabolism under two distinct stresses known to trigger JA biosynthesis and signaling, namely mechanical wounding used as a proxy for attack by chewing insects, and salt exposure as a relevant abiotic stress that increasingly threatens rice productivity under agricultural conditions (Shrivastava and Kumar 2015). The study sheds light onto new players of JA hormone turnover and increases the . . .
If you want to have access to all the content you need to log in!
Thanks :)
If you don't have an account, you can create one here.