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V E Franklin-Tong

Explore the profile of V E Franklin-Tong including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles. Areas
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Articles 20
Citations 712
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Recent Articles
1.
Drobak B, Franklin-Tong V, Staiger C
New Phytol . 2021 Apr; 163(1):13-30. PMID: 33873778
The plant actin cytoskeleton provides a dynamic cellular component which is involved in the maintenance of cell shape and structure. It has been demonstrated recently that the actin cytoskeleton and...
2.
Wheeler M, Franklin-Tong V, Franklin F
New Phytol . 2021 Apr; 151(3):565-584. PMID: 33853259
Over the past decade or so, there has been significant progress towards elucidating the molecular events occurring during pollination in flowering plants. This process involves a series of complex cellular...
3.
Rudd J, Franklin-Tong V
Cell Mol Life Sci . 2014 Feb; 55(2):214-32. PMID: 24481914
Changes in the cytosolic concentration of calcium ions ([Ca(2+)]i) play a key second messenger role in signal transduction. These changes are visualized by making use of either Ca(2+)-sensitive fluorescent dyes...
4.
Smertenko A, Franklin-Tong V
Cell Death Differ . 2011 May; 18(8):1263-70. PMID: 21566662
Programmed cell death (PCD) involves precise integration of cellular responses to extracellular and intracellular signals during both stress and development. In recent years much progress in our understanding of the...
5.
van Doorn W, Beers E, Dangl J, Franklin-Tong V, Gallois P, Hara-Nishimura I, et al.
Cell Death Differ . 2011 Apr; 18(8):1241-6. PMID: 21494263
Programmed cell death (PCD) is an integral part of plant development and of responses to abiotic stress or pathogens. Although the morphology of plant PCD is, in some cases, well...
6.
Geitmann A, Franklin-Tong V, Emons A
Cell Death Differ . 2004 Mar; 11(8):812-22. PMID: 15044967
Self-incompatibility (SI) in Papaver rhoeas is accompanied by a cascade of signalling events that result in the rapid arrest and eventual death of the pollen tube. We have used rapid...
7.
Wheeler M, Armstrong S, Franklin-Tong V, Franklin F
J Exp Bot . 2002 Nov; 54(380):131-9. PMID: 12456763
The self-incompatibility (SI) response in Papaver rhoeas depends upon the cognate interaction between a pollen-expressed receptor and a stigmatically expressed ligand. The genes encoding these components are situated within the...
8.
Staiger C, Franklin-Tong V
J Exp Bot . 2002 Nov; 54(380):103-13. PMID: 12456760
The integration of signals received by a cell, and their transduction to targets, is essential for all cellular responses. The cytoskeleton has been identified as a major target of signalling...
9.
Jordan N, Franklin F, Franklin-Tong V
Plant J . 2000 Sep; 23(4):471-9. PMID: 10972873
Studies of the molecular and biochemical basis of self-incompatibility (SI) in Papaver rhoeas have revealed much about the signalling pathways triggered in pollen early in this response. The aim of...
10.
Geitmann A, Snowman B, Emons A, Franklin-Tong V
Plant Cell . 2000 Jul; 12(7):1239-51. PMID: 10899987
Self-incompatibility (SI) is a genetically controlled process used to prevent self-pollination. In Papaver rhoeas, the induction of SI is triggered by a Ca(2)+-dependent signaling pathway that results in the rapid...