structural-biology
Structural biology is the study of how biological molecules and tissues are organized and arranged across all levels of biological organization. In plant science, understanding plant structure—from molecular proteins to cellular architecture to whole-organism morphology—is essential for explaining how plants grow, function, and respond to environmental stresses. This knowledge enables researchers to develop improved crop varieties, understand disease mechanisms, and optimize plant traits for agricultural and biotechnological applications.
open_in_new WikipediaEvolutionary-based remodeling of ABA receptors reveals the structur...
Every tomato plant, wheat stalk, and oak tree in your garden uses this exact molecular alarm to d...
The SPX protein family in plants: from phosphate sensors to multifu...
Farmers apply billions of pounds of phosphorus fertilizer every year to compensate for what plant...
An activated wheat CCG10-NLR immune receptor forms an octameric res...
Wheat rust and other fungal blights can wipe out entire fields in weeks — understanding exactly h...
metaRLK 2.0: An updated database of plant receptor-like kinases dev...
Every time your tomatoes toughen their skins against heat or your oak seedling stiffens its cell ...
Xyloglucan xylosyltransferase stem region mediates heterodimer formation.
When a bean seedling forces its way through compacted garden soil or a sapling whips in a storm w...
Structural, dynamic, and evolutionary determinants of substrate bin...
Every fruit, vegetable, and grain on your plate relies on the same sugar-processing chemistry stu...