Brassinosteroids Current Events | Brassinosteroids News
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Plants on steroids: Key missing link discovered Researchers at the Carnegie Institution's Department of Plant Biology have discovered a key missing link in the so-called signaling pathway for plant steroid hormones (brassinosteroids). view more (2009-09-09)
No-Mow Grass May Be Coming to Your Yard Soon For anyone tethered to a lawnmower, the Holy Grail of horticultural accomplishment would be grass that never grows but is always green. view more (2006-05-08)
ISU researcher identifies genetic pathway responsible for much of plant growth Researchers at Iowa State University have discovered a previously unknown pathway in plant cells that regulates plant growth. view more (2009-05-21)
Salk scientists untangle steroid hormone signaling in plants When given extra shots of the plant steroid brassinolide, plants "pump up" like major league baseball players do on steroids. view more (2006-05-04)
Getting plants to rid themselves of pesticide residues Scientists in China are reporting the "intriguing" discovery that a natural plant hormone, applied to crops, can help plants eliminate residues of certain pesticides. view more (2009-09-10)
Getting plants to rid themselves of pesticide residues Scientists in China have discovered that a natural plant hormone, applied to crops, can help plants eliminate residues of certain pesticides. The study is in the current issue of ACS' Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, a bi-weekly publication. view more (2009-10-01)
Researchers learn what sparks plant growth A secret long held by plants has been revealed by Howard Hughes Medical Institute researchers. The new discovery, which builds on more than a decade of painstaking surveillance of cellular communication between different types of plant tissues, shows clearly for the first time how plants "decide" to grow. view more (2007-03-08)
Computational analysis shows that plant hormones often go it alone or years, debate swirled around whether pathways activated by growth-regulating plant hormones converge on a central growth regulatory module. view more (2006-08-11)
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