HIGHLIGHTS
- who: Christina M. Kelliher and colleagues from the Hampshire, United States of America, Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston have published the research: Nutritional compensation of the circadian clock is a conserved process influenced by gene expression regulation and mRNA stability, in the Journal: Nutritional compensation is distinct from temperature compensation in Neurospora We first set out to characterize the properties of Nutritional Compensation in wild-type Neurospora. Traditional circadian experiments have utilized the ras-1bd mutant, which promotes the formation of circadianly regulated distinct bands of conidial spores in a race tube assay [41 . . .
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