Apr 23 2015 Ehrhardt named Royal Microscopical Society honorary fellow By Carnegie HQ Stanford, CA— Carnegie’s David Ehrhardt has been awarded an honorary fellowship of the Royal Microscopical Society. It was announced during the society’s Botanical Microscopy 2015 meeting at Exeter University. Potential fellows must be nominated and ...
Apr 09 2015 Hormones that guide root growth rates revealed By Carnegie HQ Stanford, CA— A plant's roots grow and spread into the soil, taking up necessary water and minerals. The tip of a plant's root is a place of active cell division followed by cell elongation, with different zones dedicated to different functions, all ...
Mar 20 2015 Food-delivery process inside seeds revealed By Carnegie HQ Stanford, CA— Inside every seed is the embryo of a plant, and in most cases also a storage of food needed to power initial growth of the young seedling. A seed consists mainly of carbohydrates and these have to be is transported from the leaf where ...
Mar 15 2015 How do they do plant research without growing a thing? By Carnegie HQ Human health and survival depend in large part on the chemistry of plant metabolism. About a quarter of our prescription drugs and half of anticancer drugs come from plants. These compounds, called specialized or secondary metabolites, are used to ...
Nov 13 2014 Switching on a dime: how plants function in shade and light By Carnegie HQ Stanford, CA— Photosynthesis is the process by which plants convert energy from the sunlight into chemical energy in the form of sugars. These sugars are used by plants to grow and function, as well as food for animals and humans that eat them. ...
Nov 13 2014 Carnegie Institution Receives Phase II Grand Challenges Explorations Funding By Carnegie HQ Washington, D.C.— Carnegie announced today that it will receive Phase II funding through Grand Challenges Explorations , an initiative created by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation that enables individuals worldwide to test bold ideas to ...
Nov 09 2014 Biochemistry detective work: algae at night By Carnegie HQ Stanford, CA —Photosynthesis is probably the most well-known aspect of plant biochemistry. It enables plants, algae, and select bacteria to transform the energy from sunlight during the daytime into chemical energy in the form of sugars and starches ...
Oct 27 2014 Right place, right time: Cellular transportation compartments By Carnegie HQ Stanford, CA — Proteins are the machinery that accomplishes almost every task in every cell in every living organism. The instructions for how to build each protein are written into a cell’s DNA. But once the proteins are constructed, they must be ...