Frederick M. Ausubel
Harvard University
393 Papers
6K Citations
Frederick M. Ausubel is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Gene. The author has an hindex of 133, co-authored 389 publications. Previous affiliations of Frederick M. Ausubel include Max Planck Society & University of California, Berkeley.
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Papers
MAP kinase signalling cascade in Arabidopsis innate immunity
Tsuneaki Asai,Guillaume Tena,Joulia Plotnikova,Matthew R. Willmann,Wan-Ling Chiu,Lourdes Gómez-Gómez,Thomas Boller,Frederick M. Ausubel,Jen Sheen +8 more
TL;DR: An Arabidopsis thaliana leaf cell system based on the induction of early-defence gene transcription by flagellin, a highly conserved component of bacterial flagella that functions as a PAMP in plants and mammals is developed, suggesting that signalling events initiated by diverse pathogens converge into a conserved MAPK cascade.
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Isochorismate synthase is required to synthesize salicylic acid for plant defence
TL;DR: By cloning and characterizing an Arabidopsis defence-related gene (SID2) defined by mutation, it is shown that SA is synthesized from chorismate by means of ICS, and that SA made by this pathway is required for LAR and SAR responses.
2.3K
A procedure for mapping Arabidopsis mutations using co‐dominant ecotype‐specific PCR‐based markers
TL;DR: A set of mapping markers have been designed for Arabidopsis thaliana that correspond to DNA fragments amplified by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) that can be unambiguously mapped to one of the 10Arabidopsis chromosome arms in a single cross using a limited number of F2 progeny.
1.7K
Common virulence factors for bacterial pathogenicity in plants and animals
Laurence G. Rahme,Emily J. Stevens,Sean F. Wolfort,Jing Shao,Ronald G. Tompkins,Frederick M. Ausubel +5 more
TL;DR: A Pseudomonas aeruginosa strain (UCBPP-PA14) is infectious both in an Arabidopsis thaliana leaf infiltration model and in a mouse full-thickness skin burn model, indicating that these genes encode virulence factors required for the full expression of pathogenicity in both plants and animals.
1.4K