Ross E. Koning
Eastern Connecticut State University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Ross E. Koning.
The Plant Cell | 2004
Neil A. McHale; Ross E. Koning
Leaf initiation in the peripheral zone of the shoot apical meristem involves a transition to determinate cell fate, but indeterminacy is maintained in the vascular cambium, a tissue critical to the continuous growth of vascular tissue in leaves and stems. We show that the orientation of cambial growth is regulated by microRNA (miRNA)-directed cleavage of mRNA from the Nicotiana sylvestris ortholog of PHAVOLUTA (NsPHAV). Loss of miRNA regulation in semidominant phv1 mutants misdirects lateral growth of leaf midveins and stem vasculature away from the shoot, disrupting vascular connections in stem nodes. The phv1 mutation also expands the central zone in vegetative and inflorescence meristems, implicating miRNA and NsPHAV in regulation of meristem structure. In flowers, phv1 causes reiteration of carpel initiation, a phenocopy for loss of CARPEL FACTORY/DICER LIKE1, indicating that miRNA is critical to the termination of indeterminacy in floral meristems. Results point to a common role for miRNA in spatial and temporal restriction of HD-ZIPIII mediated indeterminacy in apical and vascular meristems.
The Plant Cell | 2004
Neil A. McHale; Ross E. Koning
Initiation and growth of leaf blades is oriented by an adaxial/abaxial axis aligned with the original axis of polarity in the leaf primordium. To investigate mechanisms regulating this process, we cloned the Nicotiana tabacum ortholog of PHANTASTICA (NTPHAN) and generated a series of antisense transgenics in N. sylvestris. We show that NSPHAN is expressed throughout emerging blade primordia in the wild type and becomes localized to the middle mesophyll in the expanding lamina. Antisense NSPHAN leaves show ectopic expression of NTH20, a class I KNOX gene. Juvenile transgenic leaves have normal adaxial/abaxial polarity and generate leaf blades in the normal position, but the adaxial mesophyll shows disorganized patterns of cell division, delayed maturation of palisade, and ectopic reinitiation of blade primordia along the midrib. Reversal of the phenotype with exogenous gibberellic acid suggests that NSPHAN, acting via KNOX repression, maintains determinacy in the expanding lamina and sustains the patterns of cell proliferation critical to palisade development.
American Journal of Botany | 1986
Ross E. Koning
The roles of ethylene in corolla growth and senescence have been extensively studied; light, temperature, and abscisic acid (ABA) have already been implicated in rapid corolla opening (unfolding) in morning glory. In the present study, a possible interaction between ABA and ethylene production was examined. While applied ABA promoted corolla unfolding, it also promoted ethylene production. Furthermore, the effect of ABA could be eliminated by the ethylene biosynthesis inhibitors, aminoethoxyvinyl glycine (AVG) and cobalt ions. Simultaneously applied aminocyclopropane carboxylic acid (ACC) augmented the ABA response, but ACC applied alone promoted corolla unfolding as effectively as ABA alone. Measurements of ethylene production during eight successive stages of flower opening showed that the ethylene burst widely reported to occur in opened flowers prior to corolla senescence actually begins before the corolla unfolds. Ethylene production seems to be a later part of the sequence of biochemical events that leads to both corolla unfolding and synchronized inrolling and senescence.
American Journal of Botany | 1984
Ross E. Koning
American Journal of Botany | 1983
Ross E. Koning
American Journal of Botany | 1983
Ross E. Koning
Plant Physiology | 1989
Helen Guiragossian Kiss; Ross E. Koning
American Journal of Botany | 1986
Helen A. Guiragossian; Ross E. Koning
American Journal of Botany | 1990
Helen Guiragossian Kiss; Ross E. Koning
American Journal of Botany | 1986
Ross E. Koning