V Haring, JE Gray, BA McClure, MA Anderson, AE … - Science, 1990 - sciencemag.org Self-incompatibility (SI), a genetically controlled mecha- nism to prevent inbreeding in plants, offers a relatively simple model system for studying the interactions be- tween plant cells
or between a plant cell and the secreted product or products of another cell. Examples of ... Cited by 94 - Related articles - All 7 versions
cell.com[HTML] B Gillissen, J Bergemann, C Sandmann, B Schroeer, M … - Cell, 1992 - cell.com ... A two-component regulatory system for self/non-selfrecognition in Ustilago maydis Cell, Volume
68, Issue 4, 21 February 1992, Pages 647 ... In the plant pathogenic fungus Ustilago maydis, sexual
and pathogenic development are controlled by the multiallelic b mating-type locus. ... Cited by 198 - Related articles - Cached - All 6 versions
pnas.org[PDF] JC Stein, B Howlett, DC Boyes, ME … - Proceedings of the …, 1991 - National Acad Sciences ... Pollination and the subsequent invasive growth of pollen tubes into the female stigmatic and
pistil tissues prior to fertilization provide an opportunity to study cell-cell inter- actions in flowering plants. In crucifers such as Brassica oleracea, self-recognition between pollen and ... Cited by 459 - Related articles - All 10 versions
T Hodgkin, GD Lyon, HG Dickinson - New Phytologist, 1988 - jstor.org ... is biochemical evidence that, in HP interactions, recognition by the host of host cell wall
degradation products ('selfrecognition) may be ... Secondly, most resistance genes can act
independently of each other, correspondence at only one plant and pathogen locus being ... Cited by 42 - Related articles - All 7 versions
plantcell.org[PDF] S Huang, HS Lee, B Karunanandaa, TH … - The Plant Cell …, 1994 - Am Soc Plant Biol Page 1. The Plant Cell, Vol. 6, 1021-1028, July 1994 0 1994 American Society of Plant
Physiologists Ribonuclease Activity of Petunia inflata S Proteins ... Page 2. 1022 The Plant Cell
of S proteins (Haring et al., 1990; Thompson and Kirch, 1992; Sims, 1993; Kao and Huang, 1994). ... Cited by 164 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 6 versions
JE Neigel, JC Avise - Evolution, 1983 - jstor.org ... these methods. Biological self-recognition phenomena, exemplified by self-sterility
in flowering plants and immune systems in animals, have been utilized in a
population genetic context for only a few species. An analysis of ... Cited by 59 - Related articles - All 2 versions
CJ Bayne - Bioscience, 1990 - jstor.org ... Exotic lectins (often of plant origin, like concanava- lin A) do bridge red blood cells and
molluscan hemocytes, yielding ro- settes. ... These findings seemed to provide a clear picture
of the elements that characterize the non-selfrecognition system. ... Cited by 104 - Related articles
TR Ioerger, JR Gohlke, B Xu, T Kao - Sexual Plant Reproduction, 1991 - Springer ... be tested experimentally by introducing hybrid S- genes containing various portions of different
S-genes into transgenic plants and examining ... 1987), which is involved in self/ non-selfrecognition,
revealed that specificity is probably determined by residues clustered in several ... Cited by 94 - Related articles - All 2 versions
T Boller - Annual Review of Plant Biology, 1995 - Annual Reviews ... CHEMOPERCEPTION OF MICROBIAL SIGNALS IN PLANT CELLS ... 191 reviewed elsewhere [eg
the formation of root nodules induced by Nod factors in legumes (23, 41, 59, 61) or the defense
reactions induced by elicitors in responsive plant tissues (47, 47a, 94)]. ... Cited by 311 - Related articles - BL Direct - All 5 versions
[CITATION] Cell-cell communication in plants: self-incompatibility in flower …