Research Topics
Species | M K BartonSummaryAffiliation: Stanford University Country: USA Publications
Research Grants
| Collaborators
|
Detail Information
Publications
Twenty years on: the inner workings of the shoot apical meristem, a developmental dynamoM K Barton
Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution for Science, 260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
Dev Biol 341:95-113. 2010....
The ins and outs of Arabidopsis embryogenesisM Kathryn Barton
Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
Dev Cell 12:849-50. 2007..2007). Embryos lacking these kinases show replacement of outer cell fates with inner cell fates...
Making holes in leaves: promoting cell state transitions in stomatal developmentM Kathryn Barton
Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
Plant Cell 19:1140-3. 2007
A feedback regulatory module formed by LITTLE ZIPPER and HD-ZIPIII genesStephan Wenkel
Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution, Stanford, California 94305, USA
Plant Cell 19:3379-90. 2007....
Giving meaning to movementM K Barton
Department of Genetics, University of Wisconsin Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA
Cell 107:129-32. 2001..A recent paper by Nakajima et al. (2001) shows that movement of the SHORTROOT protein provides a mechanism for signaling positional information between cell layers of the root...
Botany. Leaf development takes shapeJ R McConnell
Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
Science 299:1328-9. 2003
MicroRNA control of PHABULOSA in leaf development: importance of pairing to the microRNA 5' regionAllison C Mallory
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, MA 02142 1479, USA
EMBO J 23:3356-64. 2004....
Surge and destroy: the role of auxin in plant embryogenesisPablo D Jenik
Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution, 260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
Development 132:3577-85. 2005..As we discuss here, the resulting downstream gene activation, together with other, less well-understood regulatory pathways, establish much of the basic body plan of the angiosperm embryo...
Regulation of axis determinacy by the Arabidopsis PINHEAD geneKaryn Lynn Newman
Department of Genetics and Program in Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA
Plant Cell 14:3029-42. 2002..Our results add to a growing body of evidence that radial positional information is important in meristem formation. These results also indicate that genes regulating cell division and axis determinacy are likely to be among PNH targets...
Transformation of shoots into roots in Arabidopsis embryos mutant at the TOPLESS locusJeff A Long
Department of Genetics and Program in Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA
Development 129:2797-806. 2002....
Plant biology. Plant acupuncture: sticking PINs in the right placesNicholas J Kaplinsky
Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
Science 306:822-3. 2004
Interactions between the cell cycle and embryonic patterning in Arabidopsis uncovered by a mutation in DNA polymerase epsilonPablo D Jenik
Department of Plant Biology, Carnegie Institution, Stanford, California 94305, USA
Plant Cell 17:3362-77. 2005..The results uncover an interaction between the cell cycle and the processes that determine cell fate during plant embryogenesis...
MicroRNA binding sites in Arabidopsis class III HD-ZIP mRNAs are required for methylation of the template chromosomeNing Bao
Program in Plant Breeding and Plant Genetics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, USA
Dev Cell 7:653-62. 2004..These results suggest a model in which the microRNA interacts with nascent, newly processed PHB mRNA to alter chromatin of the corresponding PHB template DNA predominantly in differentiated cells...
Research Grants
- Posttranscriptional control of meristem developmentKATHRYN BARTON; Fiscal Year: 2006..Finally, we will perform experiments to determine to what degree PNH and AGO functions differ from one another and what gene or protein sequences are responsible for this specificity. ..
