Now showing items 1-4 of 4

    • Approaches to study light effects on brassinosteroid sensitivity 

      Paulišic, Sandi; Molina Contreras, Maria José; Roig Villanova, Irma; Martínez García, Jaime Francisco (Springer, 2017-01-26)
      Part of book or chapter of book
      Restricted access - publisher's policy
      Light perception and hormone signaling in plants are likely connected at multiple points. Light conditions, perceived by photoreceptors, control plant responses by altering hormone concentration, tissue sensitivity, or a ...
    • Light signals generated by vegetation shade facilitate acclimation to low light in shade-avoider plants 

      Morelli, Luca; Roig Villanova, Irma; Rodríguez Concepción, Manuel; Paulišic, Sandi; Martínez García, Jaime Francisco; Wenting, Qin; Iglesias Sánchez, Ariadna; Florez Sarasa, Igor (American Society of Plant Biologists, 2021-05-07)
      Article
      Open Access
      When growing in search for light, plants can experience continuous or occasional shading by other plants. Plant proximity causes a decrease in the ratio of red to far-red light (low R:FR) due to the preferential absorbance ...
    • Photoreceptor activity contributes to contrasting responses to shade in cardamine and arabidopsis seedlings 

      Molina Contreras, Maria José; Paulišic, Sandi; Then, Christiane; Moreno Romero, Jordi; Pastor Andreu, Pedro; Morelli, Luca; Roig Villanova, Irma; Jenkins, Huw; Hallab, Asis; Gan, Xiangchao; Gómez Cadenas, Aurelio; Tsiantis, Miltos; Rodríguez Concepción, Manuel; Martínez García, Jaime Francisco (American Society of Plant Biologists, 2019-09-17)
      Article
      Open Access
      Plants have evolved two major ways to deal with nearby vegetation or shade: avoidance and tolerance. Moreover, someplants respond to shade in different ways; for example, Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) undergoes an ...
    • Shade avoidance and neighbor detection 

      Roig Villanova, Irma; Paulišic, Sandi; Martínez García, Jaime Francisco (Springer, 2019)
      Part of book or chapter of book
      Restricted access - publisher's policy
      Plants detect neighboring vegetation as potential competitors for resources. Vegetation proximity is perceived by changes in the red (R) to far-red (FR) ratio (R:FR) through the phytochrome photorecep-tors. To face this ...