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The Physiology of Flowering Plants - KHAM PHA MOI

The Physiology of Flowering Plants - KHAM PHA MOI

The Physiology of Flowering Plants - KHAM PHA MOI

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220 CELL GROWTH AND DIFFERENTIATIONMori, T., Kuroiwa, H., Takahara, M., Miyagishima, S. & Kuroiwa, T. (2001).Visualization <strong>of</strong> an FtsZ ring in chloroplasts <strong>of</strong> Lilium longiflorum leaves. Plantand Cell <strong>Physiology</strong>, 42, 555–9.Osteryoung, K. W., Stokes, K. D., Rutherford, S. M., Percival, A. L. & Lee,W. Y. (1998). Chloroplast division in higher plants requires members <strong>of</strong> tw<strong>of</strong>unctionally divergent gene families with homology to bacterial ftsZ. <strong>The</strong>Plant Cell, 10, 1991–2004.Pyke, K. A., Rutherford, S. M., Robertson, E. J. & Leech, R. M. (1994). arc6, afertile Arabidopsis mutant with only 2 mesophyll cell chloroplasts. Plant<strong>Physiology</strong>, 106, 1169–77.Rossi, V. & Varotto, S. (2002). Insights into the G1/S transition in plants. Planta,215, 345–56.Simon, E. W. & Chapman, J. A. (1961). <strong>The</strong> development <strong>of</strong> mitochondria inArum spadix. Journal <strong>of</strong> Experimental Botany, 12, 414–20.Stals, H. & Inzé, D. (2001). When plant cells decide to divide. Trends in PlantScience, 6, 359–64.

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