Publications of A. R. Fernie
All genres
Journal Article (1099)
961.
Journal Article
22 (8), pp. 2872 - 2893 (2010)
Network analysis of enzyme activities and metabolite levels and their relationship to biomass in a large panel of Arabidopsis accessions. The Plant Cell 962.
Journal Article
62 (4), pp. 641 - 652 (2010)
Cytosolic pyruvate,orthophosphate dikinase functions in nitrogen remobilization during leaf senescence and limits individual seed growth and nitrogen content. The Plant Journal 963.
Journal Article
5 (6), pp. 1210 - 1227 (2010)
Combining genetic diversity, informatics and metabolomics to facilitate annotation of plant gene function. Nature Protocols 964.
Journal Article
153 (2), pp. 611 - 621 (2010)
Tricarboxylic Acid Cycle Activity Regulates Tomato Root Growth via Effects on Secondary Cell Wall Production. Plant Physiology 965.
Journal Article
61 (2), pp. 300 - 311 (2010)
SlCCD7 controls strigolactone biosynthesis, shoot branching and mycorrhiza-induced apocarotenoid formation in tomato. The Plant Journal 966.
Journal Article
151 (4), pp. 2058 - 2072 (2009)
Deciphering Transcriptional and Metabolic Networks Associated with Lysine Metabolism during Arabidopsis Seed Development. Plant Physiology 967.
Journal Article
21 (9), pp. 2715 - 2732 (2009)
Dynamic Plastid Redox Signals Integrate Gene Expression and Metabolism to Induce Distinct Metabolic States in Photosynthetic Acclimation in Arabidopsis. The Plant Cell 968.
Journal Article
70 (7), pp. 828 - 832 (2009)
Malate. Jack of all trades or master of a few? Phytochemistry 969.
Journal Article
60 (3), pp. 499 - 508 (2009)
GDP-d-mannose 3,5-epimerase (GME) plays a key role at the intersection of ascorbate and non-cellulosic cell-wall biosynthesis in tomato. The Plant Journal 970.
Journal Article
59 (2), pp. 329 - 343 (2009)
Photosynthesis in cells around veins of the C-3 plant Arabidopsis thaliana is important for both the shikimate pathway and leaf senescence as well as contributing to plant fitness. The Plant Journal 971.
Journal Article
2 (3), pp. 390 - 406 (2009)
The Metabolic Response of Arabidopsis Roots to Oxidative Stress is Distinct from that of Heterotrophic Cells in Culture and Highlights a Complex Relationship between the Levels of Transcripts, Metabolites, and Flux. Molecular Plant 972.
Journal Article
150 (3), pp. 1248 - 1259 (2009)
A Redox-Mediated Modulation of Stem Bolting in Transgenic Nicotiana sylvestris Differentially Expressing the External Mitochondrial NADPH Dehydrogenase. Plant Physiology 973.
Journal Article
5, p. 4 (2009)
Application of GC-MS for the detection of lipophilic compounds in diverse plant tissues. Plant Methods 974.
Journal Article
151 (2), pp. 905 - 924 (2009)
Abnormal Physiological and Molecular Mutant Phenotypes Link Chloroplast Polynucleotide Phosphorylase to the Phosphorus Deprivation Response in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiology 975.
Journal Article
4 (024), pp. 1 - 9 (2009)
Application of metabolomic profiling for identififying valuable traits in tomato. CAB Reviews: Perspectives in Agriculture, Veterinary Science, Nutrition and Natural Resources 976.
Journal Article
284 (45), pp. 31249 - 31259 (2009)
Molecular Identification and Functional Characterization of Arabidopsis thaliana Mitochondrial and Chloroplastic NAD(+) Carrier Proteins. The Journal of Biological Chemistry 977.
Journal Article
2 (2), pp. 284 - 297 (2009)
Induction of the AOX1D Isoform of Alternative Oxidase in A-thaliana T-DNA Insertion Lines Lacking Isoform AOX1A Is Insufficient to Optimize Photosynthesis when Treated with Antimycin A. Molecular Plant 978.
Journal Article
106 (25), pp. 10348 - 10353 (2009)
Starch as a major integrator in the regulation of plant growth. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 979.
Journal Article
31, pp. 2 - 6 (2009)
Finding the paths -metabolomics and approaches to metabolic flux analysis for defining metabolic pathways and their regulation. Biochemist 980.
Journal Article
5 (3), pp. 277 - 291 (2009)
Temporally resolved GC-MS-based metabolic profiling of herbicide treated plants treated reveals that changes in polar primary metabolites alone can distinguish herbicides of differing mode of action. Metabolomics