Title: Figure 1.
1Figure 1. Â Fluorescent in situ hybrization
reveals that the SBEIIa is located on the long
arm of chromosome 2Â in wheat
Plant Physiology Minorsky March 2001
2Figure 2. Â Sugary maize mutants (upper) are
defective in an SDBE, and have kernels that are
glassy, translucent, and shrunken compared with
wild type (lower).
Plant Physiology Minorsky March 2001
3Figure 3. Â Ectopic expression of the GA
2-oxidase gene impedes flowering in rice (two
plants on right).
Plant Physiology Minorsky March 2001
4Plant Physiology Yuan et al. March 2001
5Plant Physiology Yuan et al. March 2001
6Plant Physiology Yuan et al. March 2001
Figure 2. Â Annotation of a chromosome 10Â rice
BAC
7Figure 3. Â Alignment of TCs and singletons from
the TIGR Plant Gene Indices with sequences from
rice chromosome 10.Â
Plant Physiology Yuan et al. March 2001
8Figure 4. Â An example TOG from the TOGA database
containing rice, wheat, and maize TCs
Plant Physiology Yuan et al. March 2001
9Plant Physiology Greco et al. March 2001
Figure 1. Â Generation of a knockout population
using multiple copy Ac lines
10Figure 2. Â Gene detection strategy. A, Example
of a two-component Ac/Ds construct
Plant Physiology Greco et al. March 2001
11Plant Physiology Greco et al. March 2001
Figure 2 B, Example of two single T-DNA copy ET
lines
12Figure 2 C, Example of pollen-specific
-glucuronidase (GUS) staining in anthers of a
mature rice flower,
Plant Physiology Greco et al. March 2001