Herbicide that prevents microtubule polymerization in plant cells, but not animal cells. Crop plants resistant to amiprofos-methyl and several other herbicides have been developed by insertion of a xenobiotic-detoxifying human gene CYP2B6.
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Arabinogalactan proteins (AGPs), a superfamily of plant hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins, are present at cell surfaces. Although precise functions of AGPs remain elusive, they are widely implicated in plant growth and development. A well-characterized classical tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) AGP containing a glycosylphosphatidylinositol
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 466, 767-784 (1986-01-01)
Mitosis is arrested in Haemanthus endosperm by amiprophos-methyl and oryzalin at a concentration of 100 nM, and anaphase chromosome movements are modified at 10 nM. Prolonged exposure to these drugs results in a classical c-mitosis. Anaphase chromosome movement is arrested
Herbicides and fungicides stimulate Ca2+ efflux from rat liver mitochondria.
Microfibril deposition in most plant cells is influenced by cortical microtubules. Thus, cortical microtubules are templates that provide spatial information to the cell wall. How cortical microtubules acquire their spatial information and are positioned is unknown. There are indications that
The Biochemical journal, 212(3), 567-572 (1983-06-15)
In maize mitochondria the effect of the herbicide amiprophosmethyl was studied on massive and limited Ca2+-loading and on mitochondrial energy transduction. Under massive Ca2+-loading conditions amiprophosmethyl inhibited the Ca2+ transport system directly without a significant effect on the respiratory chain
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