As a senescing hormone, it promotes leaf-yellowing, climacteric fruit ripening, flower and leaf abscission. |
|
In the climacteric fruit tomato, ethylene is perceived by a family of six receptor proteins. |
|
But the First World War shocked even him, and that was probably a climacteric. |
|
In the end, this subplot becomes a mere plot device when the out-of-control avenging husband bails up O'Reilly at the climacteric. |
|
The destruction of the Babri Masjid was an important climacteric in the decline of the administration. |
|
The sight of him obediently doing this is an awe-inspiring climacteric in his career. |
|
By contrast, Dickens's second protagonist, Oliver Twist, experiences what seems set to be his climacteric in an intensely fraught boyhood. |
|
A transitional period occurs prior to menopause termed the climacteric or perimenopause. |
|
Ethylene plays a major role in initiating ripening in climacteric fruits such as tomato and apple. |
|
It is thought that the increase in ethylene responsiveness during petal development culminates in the ethylene climacteric. |
|
Thus it appears that some aspects of ethylene-dependent gene expression are conserved between climacteric fruits such as melon and tomato. |
|
Conflicting results have been reported during the ripening of climacteric fruits after harvest. |
|
The fact that such a climacteric event of our history is not being taught is disconcerting. |
|
There are two aspects of this climacteric event to be considered in relation to the history of our civilization. |
|
We studied the effects of daily use of isoflavonoids on climacteric symptoms and quality of life in patients with a history of breast cancer. |
|
Again, the results revealed no significant differences in climacteric symptoms or well-being between the groups. |
|
Both Western and Chinese herbal traditions have numerous solutions for climacteric women. |
|
In females about 50 years old, various symptoms of climacteric disorders may appear with the decline of ovarian function. |
|
The majority of this work, however, has been conducted on climacteric species. |
|
The authors conclude that a dosage of 114 mg per day of phytoestrogens for three months does not relieve hot flushes or other climacteric symptoms. |
|
|
In this way the so-called 'shelf-life' of climacteric fruit can be extended for weeks or months, facilitating longdistance trade. |
|
These climacteric fruits can be harvested at any time between the mature and ripe stage. |
|
Given these emphases on significant dates, it may not be coincidental that the Ara Pacis was begun during the year in which Augustus reached the climacteric age of fifty. |
|
Lock starts the chapter with an interesting historical review of the emergence of the female climacteric or menopause in medical and psychoanalytic discourse. |
|
Whatever the nomenclature, be it male menopause or climacteric or age related hypotestosteronaemia, men presenting with symptoms outlined in the box should be investigated. |
|
The year 1981 was a major climacteric for the politicization of policing, most obviously because of the urban riots, unprecedented in the twentieth century. |
|
Recently, it has been shown that young Citrus fruitlets are able to synthesize ethylene in a manner that resembles the system II pathway of the climacteric fruits. |
|
In climacteric fruits such as peaches and tomato, ripening is associated with a characteristic burst of respiration which correlates with an increase in ethylene production. |
|
It forms the climacteric to Maxwell's third novel, The Folded Leaf, in which the hero, Lymie, slits his wrists. |
|
It is also possible to diminish climacteric signs and to offer a sensation of general well-being through the intake of dietary supplements. |
|
From the ninth day onward, as ethylene output decreased, the speckles began to swell back up to their original dimensions, signalling that the apple had passed its so-called climacteric peak. |
|
It was an earthquake, a climacteric, a revelation. |
|
Fruit traits clim Fruit climacteric, ripens after being harvested mature n-c Fruit non-climacteric, no further ripening after harvest par Fruits commonly seedless: parthenocarpy. |
|
The term climacteric, often used today as a synonym for menopause was applied to both women and men in mid-life until the middle of the last century, when the term menopause was invented. |
|
One full year for those in prolonged puberty who have never menstruated and for those whose menstruation has stopped without them having reached the climacteric. |
|
Three months for women having reached the climacteric. |
|
It is used as a replacement therapy in impotence or for male climacteric symptoms when the conditions are due to a measured or documented androgen deficiency. |
|
This is especially true in the case of climacteric fruits, which are harvested at a green stage and ripen during the marketing phase, with variable harvest to consumption times and channels. |
|