Search
tag

phytohormone-signaling

6 articles

Phytohormone signaling refers to the complex network of chemical messengers—including auxins, gibberellins, cytokinins, abscisic acid, and ethylene—that plants use to regulate growth, development, and responses to environmental stimuli. Understanding how these hormones are synthesized, perceived, and transduced allows researchers to unravel the molecular mechanisms underlying fundamental plant processes such as germination, flowering, fruit ripening, and stress adaptation. Advances in this field have broad implications for improving crop yields, enhancing stress tolerance, and engineering plants with desired agronomic traits.

PubMed → · research article

Strigolactone Signaling Controls Tillering Response to Phosphorus i...

Understanding how rice controls its own growth in poor soil could help farmers breed varieties th...

mail Weekly plant science — one email, Saturdays.