Search alternatives:
ppm decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), pa decreased (Expand Search), 026 decrease (Expand Search)
nn decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), mean decrease (Expand Search), gy decreased (Expand Search)
a decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), _ decreased (Expand Search), _ decreases (Expand Search)
w decrease » we decrease (Expand Search), _ decrease (Expand Search), _ decreased (Expand Search)
50 a » 50 μ (Expand Search), 50 _ (Expand Search), 50 c (Expand Search)
16 w » 16 _ (Expand Search), 16 1 (Expand Search), 16 b (Expand Search)
ppm decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), pa decreased (Expand Search), 026 decrease (Expand Search)
nn decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), mean decrease (Expand Search), gy decreased (Expand Search)
a decrease » _ decrease (Expand Search), _ decreased (Expand Search), _ decreases (Expand Search)
w decrease » we decrease (Expand Search), _ decrease (Expand Search), _ decreased (Expand Search)
50 a » 50 μ (Expand Search), 50 _ (Expand Search), 50 c (Expand Search)
16 w » 16 _ (Expand Search), 16 1 (Expand Search), 16 b (Expand Search)
-
1
-
2
-
3
-
4
-
5
-
6
-
7
-
8
Decreased virulence observed during <i>in planta</i> infection with <i>ΔFgknr4</i>.
Published 2025“…<p><b>A.</b> Wheat spike infection assay done on the susceptible cultivar Bobwhite point inoculated with sterile water only (M), wild-type <i>F</i>. …”
-
9
-
10
-
11
-
12
-
13
-
14
PPM1A facilitates both nuclear distribution and transcription potency of YAP/TAZ.
Published 2021“…<b>(B–D)</b> Transcription potency of YAP (5 ng), which was suppressed by coexpression of MST1 (50 ng) (B), LATS1 (500 ng) (C), or MAP4K1 (50 ng) (D), was markedly recovered by cotransfection of wild-type PPM1A but not the enzyme-dead PPM1A (D239N). …”
-
15
-
16
-
17
-
18
-
19
-
20
Global Land Use Change Impacts on Soil Nitrogen Availability and Environmental Losses
Published 2025“…However, how global land use changes impact soil N supply and potential N loss remains elusive. By compiling a global data set of 1,782 paired observations from 185 publications, we show that land use conversion from natural to managed ecosystems significantly reduced NNM by 7.5% (−11.5, −2.8%) and increased NN by 150% (86, 194%), indicating decreasing N availability while increasing potential N loss through denitrification and nitrate leaching. …”