proteomics
Proteomics is the large-scale study of the complete set of proteins produced by an organism, encompassing their composition, structure, and activity. In plant science, proteomics provides a powerful lens for understanding how plants respond to environmental stresses, developmental cues, and pathogens at the molecular level. By revealing which proteins are expressed and how they function, proteomics helps researchers uncover the mechanisms underlying key plant traits such as drought tolerance, nutrient uptake, and disease resistance.
open_in_new WikipediaMasters of perception: phosphorylation-dependent signaling in plants.
Understanding how plants detect and react to stress at the molecular level could lead to crops th...
Tissue-resolved proteomic characterization of oat grains guided by ...
Oats growing in your garden or a nearby field pack their nutrition into precise grain compartment...
Guard cell-enriched phosphoproteome reveals phosphorylation of endo...
Every time your garden wilts on a hot afternoon and then perks back up at dusk, guard cells are m...
Cross-Linked Reticular Magnetic Beads Immobilizing Streptavidin for...
Lab tools that catch plant proteins more precisely could eventually help scientists unravel why s...