The 1972 Meadows report, “the limits to growth”, predicted a global socio-economic tipping point during the 21st century. Now supported by 50 years of empirical evidence, this work is an invitation to take the current environmental crisis for what it is: an inversion. Taking this turn reverses many paradigms and becomes a new responsibility for plant scientists as the world becomes increasingly turbulent.
Gilles Curien and Dimitri Tolleter present their work The Arabidopsis leaf quantitative atlas: A cellular and subcellular mapping through unified data integration.
Read Marco's co-authored paper 'A plausible mechanism for longitudinal lock-in of the plant cortical microtubule array after light-induced reorientation'.
Read Boon's co-authored paper 'Modulating the activities of chloroplasts and mitochondria promotes adenosine triphosphate production and plant growth'.
Read Satoru's co-authored paper 'A mathematical model explores the contributions of bending and stretching forces to shoot gravitropism in Arabidopsis'.
Join us as we discuss Dr. Gitanjali Yadav and Professor Kedar Khare's research and recent article, "Quantification of pollen viability in Lantana camara by digital holographic microscopy".
Read Richard's co-authored paper 'Comparative transcriptomics reveals desynchronisation of gene expression during the floral transition between Arabidopsis and Brassica rapa cultivars'.
Read Yosapol's co-authored paper 'The Arabidopsis embryo as a quantifiable model for studying pattern formation'.
Read Minako's co-authored paper 'Mitochondrial dynamics and segregation during the asymmetric division of Arabidopsis zygotes'.