Works Published in 1985

search works

Displaying works 21 - 33 of 33 in total

Sorted by most recent date added to the index first, which may not be the same as publication date order.

1985 journal article

Structure of a human common cold virus and functional relationship to other picornaviruses

Nature, 317(6033), 145–153.

By: M. Rossmann*, E. Arnold*, J. Erickson*, E. Frankenberger*, J. Griffith*, H. Hecht*, J. Johnson*, G. Kamer* ...

MeSH headings : Amino Acids / analysis; Antigens, Viral / analysis; Biological Evolution; Capsid / analysis; Chemical Phenomena; Chemistry; Crystallography; Models, Molecular; Picornaviridae / ultrastructure; Receptors, Virus / analysis; Rhinovirus / ultrastructure; Serotyping; Viral Proteins / analysis; Viral Structural Proteins
TL;DR: The first atomic resolution structure of an animal virus, human rhinovirus 14, strikingly similar to known icosahedral plant RNA viruses, and four neutralizing immunogenic regions have been identified. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: Crossref
Added: July 20, 2019

1985 chapter

Photoregulation of nuclear-encoded transcripts: blue light regulation of specific transcript abundance

In K. E. Steinback, S. Bonitz, C. J. Arntzen, & L. Bogorad (Eds.), The Molecular Biology of the Photosynthetic Aparatus (pp. 367–376).

By: L. Kaufman, J. Watson, W. Briggs & W. Thompson

Ed(s): K. Steinback, S. Bonitz, C. Arntzen & L. Bogorad

TL;DR: Linkage analysis of familial data using RFLPs is making it possible to locate the chromosome segments carrying particular genes in cases where the molecular pathology of the defect is quite unknown and this is the first essential step in analysis. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
14. Life Below Water (OpenAlex)
Sources: NC State University Libraries, ORCID
Added: June 8, 2019

1985 chapter

Chromosome architecture: the distribution of recombination sites, the structure of ribosomal DNA loci, and the multiplicity of sequences containing inverted repeats

In L. van Vloten-Doting, G. S. P. Groot, & T. C. Hall (Eds.), Molecular Form and Function of the Plant Genome. New York: Plenum Press.

By: R. Flavell, M. O'Dell, D. Smith & W. Thompson

Ed(s): L. van Vloten-Doting, G. Groot & T. Hall

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: June 8, 2019

1985 journal article

Chloroplast DNA variation and evolution in Pisum: patterns of change and phylogenetic analysis

Genetics, 109, 195–213.

By: J. Palmer, R. Jorgensen & W. Thompson

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: April 11, 2019

1985 journal article

Induction of plant gene expression by light

BioEssays, 3(4), 153–159.

By: W. Thompson*, L. Kaufman* & J. Watson*

TL;DR: In vitro mutagenesis and gene transfer experiments with the gene for the small subunit of RuBP carboxylase indicate that sequences involved in regulating the level of expression in the light are located 5′ to the gene within about 1 kb of the start of transcription. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: March 2, 2019

1985 journal article

Inheritance, organization, and mapping of rbcS and cab multigene families in pea

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 82(15), 5083–5087.

By: N. Polans*, N. Weeden* & W. Thompson*

TL;DR: The results, which indicate a high level of DNA restriction fragment length polymorphism in pea, suggest sufficient variation to permit the construction of a highly detailed linkage map. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: March 2, 2019

1985 journal article

Phytochrome Control of Specific mRNA Levels in Developing Pea Buds : The Presence of Both Very Low Fluence and Low Fluence Responses

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 78(2), 388–393.

By: L. Kaufman, W. Briggs & W. Thompson*

TL;DR: Examination of phytochrome regulated changes in transcript abundance for 11 different light regulated mRNAs in developing pea buds found the very low fluence response is not far red reversible and in fact can be induced by far red light. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: March 2, 2019

1985 chapter

Phytochrome Regulation of Plant Development at the Whole Plant, Physiological, and Molecular Levels

In Sensory Perception and Transduction in Aneural Organisms (pp. 265–280).

By: W. Briggs*, D. Mandoli*, J. Shinkle*, L. Kaufman*, J. Watson* & W. Thompson*

TL;DR: The effects of light, in which it provides an environmental cue to trigger a given response, rather than providing a direct energy source for the response itself, collectively define the field of photomorphogenesis. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: Crossref, ORCID
Added: March 2, 2019

1985 conference paper

Field performance of loblolly pine tissue culture plantlets

Proceedings of the eighteenth southern forest tree improvement conference held at Long Beach, Mississippi on May 21-23, 1985, 136–144.

By: L. Frampton, R. Mott & H. Amerson

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

1985 conference paper

Development of in vitro techniques for screening loblolly pine for fusiform rust resistance

In J. Barrows-Broaddus & H. R. Powers (Eds.), Proceedings of the 2nd Rusts of Hard Pines Working Party Conference (Athens, GA) (Vol. 2, pp. 125–140). IUFRO and Southeastern Forest Experiment Station.

By: L. Frampton, H. Amerson & D. Gray

Ed(s): . J. Barrows-Broaddus & H. Powers

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

1985 conference paper

In vitro methods for the study of fusiform rust in association with loblolly pine

In J. Barrows-Broaddus & H. R. Powers (Eds.), Proceedings of the Rusts of Hard Pines Working Party Conference. Southeastern Forest Experiment Station.

By: H. Amerson, L. Frampton & R. Mott

Ed(s): . J. Barrows-Broaddus & H. Powers

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

1985 journal article

Expression of mature characteristics by tissue culture plantlets derived from embryos of loblolly pine

Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science, 110, 619–623.

By: S. McKeand

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

1985 chapter

Loblolly pine tissue culture: laboratory, greenhouse, and field studies

In K. W. H. R. R. Henke & A. H. M. J. Constantin (Eds.), Tissue culture in forestry and agriculture (pp. 271–287).

By: H. Amerson n, F. McKeand n, M. E. n, L. R. n & R. Weir

Ed(s): K. R. R. Henke & A. M. J. Constantin

TL;DR: Conifer tissue culture had its beginnings in the late 1930s and shoot regeneration cultures were first noted in 1950, but little field data have been reported on the performance of tissue-cultured conifers, but several conifer species are now established in field plantings and data should be forthcoming. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
2. Zero Hunger (OpenAlex)
Sources: NC State University Libraries, ORCID
Added: August 6, 2018

Citation Index includes data from a number of different sources. If you have questions about the sources of data in the Citation Index or need a set of data which is free to re-distribute, please contact us.

Certain data included herein are derived from the Web of Science© and InCites© (2024) of Clarivate Analytics. All rights reserved. You may not copy or re-distribute this material in whole or in part without the prior written consent of Clarivate Analytics.