Brendan S. Hinchey
Monsanto
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Publication
Featured researches published by Brendan S. Hinchey.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Donald E. Nelson; Peter P. Repetti; Tom R. Adams; Robert A. Creelman; Jingrui Wu; David C. Warner; Don C. Anstrom; Robert J. Bensen; Paolo Castiglioni; Meghan G. Donnarummo; Brendan S. Hinchey; Roderick W. Kumimoto; Don R. Maszle; Roger D. Canales; Katherine Krolikowski; Stanton B. Dotson; Neal I. Gutterson; Oliver J. Ratcliffe; Jacqueline Heard
Commercially improved crop performance under drought conditions has been challenging because of the complexity of the trait and the multitude of factors that influence yield. Here we report the results of a functional genomics approach that identified a transcription factor from the nuclear factor Y (NF-Y) family, AtNF-YB1, which acts through a previously undescribed mechanism to confer improved performance in Arabidopsis under drought conditions. An orthologous maize transcription factor, ZmNF-YB2, is shown to have an equivalent activity. Under water-limited conditions, transgenic maize plants with increased ZmNF-YB2 expression show tolerance to drought based on the responses of a number of stress-related parameters, including chlorophyll content, stomatal conductance, leaf temperature, reduced wilting, and maintenance of photosynthesis. These stress adaptations contribute to a grain yield advantage to maize under water-limited environments. The application of this technology has the potential to significantly impact maize production systems that experience drought.
Plant Direct | 2018
Paolo Castiglioni; Erin Bell; Adrian Lund; Alexander F. Rosenberg; Meghan Galligan; Brendan S. Hinchey; Stanislaus Bauer; Donald E. Nelson; Robert J. Bensen
Abstract Efforts to increase glycinebetaine (GB) levels in plants have been pursued as an approach to improving plant performance under stress conditions. To date, the impact of engineered levels of GB has been limited by metabolic constraints that restrict the achieved increases. We report the identification of a novel gene, GB1, that is differentially expressed in high and low GB accumulating maize genotypes. The predicted GB1 protein shows 60% identity to a putative C‐4 sterol methyl oxidase from rice. Overexpression of GB1 in maize and soybean led to dramatically higher leaf GB content in most of the transgenic lines compared to wild‐type. These results suggest that the GB1 protein is an important component of the biochemical pathways controlling GB accumulation in plants.
Archive | 2003
Brendan S. Hinchey; Robert J. Bensen; Donald E. Nelson
Archive | 2002
Paul S. Chomet; Michael D. Edgerton; Thomas H. Adams; Thomas G. Ruff; Ameeta K. Agarwal; Jeffrey Ahrens; James A. Ball; G. Banu; Erin Bell; Raghava Boddupalli; Keith A. Kretzmer; Mackenzie Daly; Jill Deikman; Molian Deng; Jinzhuo Dong; Stephen M.G. Duff; Meghan Galligan; Brendan S. Hinchey; Shihshieh Huang; Richard Johnson; Vincent Jung; Lucille B. Laccetti; Chao Qiang Lai; Garrett J. Lee; Jie-Yi Lin; Bin Lu; Michael H. Luethy; Adrian Lund; Linda L. Madson; Kathleen P. Malloy
Archive | 2004
Robert Benson; Paolo Castiglioni; Erin Bell; Jaffery Ahrens; Paul Loida; Brendan S. Hinchey; John Korte
Archive | 2008
Brendan S. Hinchey
Archive | 2001
Brendan S. Hinchey; Hee-Sook Song
Archive | 2007
Donald E. Nelson; Brendan S. Hinchey; Michelle Lacy; James A. Morrell; Andrey A. Boukharov; Zhaolong Li; Wei Wu; Linda Lutfiyya; Maolong Lu; David K. Kovalic; Qi Wang; Ping Li; Yongwei Cao
Archive | 2004
Robert Benson; Paolo Castiglioni; Erin Bell; Jaffery Ahrens; Paul Loida; Brendan S. Hinchey; John Korte
Archive | 2004
Robert Benson; Paolo Castiglioni; Erin Bell; Jaffery Ahrens; Paul Loida; Brendan S. Hinchey; John Korte