Sofia Shevtsov-Tal
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
4 Papers
13 Citations
Sofia Shevtsov-Tal is an academic researcher from Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & RNA splicing. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 2 publications.
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Papers
nMAT3 is an essential maturase splicing factor required for holo-complex I biogenesis and embryo development in Arabidopsis thaliana plants.
Sofia Shevtsov-Tal,Corinne Best,Roei Matan,Sam Aldrin Chandran,Gregory G. Brown,Oren Ostersetzer-Biran +5 more
TL;DR: The role of maturases in the splicing of group-II introns in early embryogenesis was investigated in Arabidopsis thaliana as mentioned in this paper, showing that nMAT3-knockout plants are strongly affected by the splice of nad1 introns 1, 3, 4 and 4, resulting in complexI biogenesis defects and altered respiratory activities.
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Group II Intron-Encoded Proteins (IEPs/Maturases) as Key Regulators of Nad1 Expression and Complex I Biogenesis in Land Plant Mitochondria
TL;DR: The following review provides an update on the non-canonical MAT factors in angiosperm mitochondria and summarize the current knowledge of their essential roles in regulating Nad1 expression and complex I (CI) biogenesis during embryogenesis and early plant life.
nMAT3 is an essential maturase splicing factor required for holo-complex I biogenesis and embryo-development in Arabidopsis thaliana plants
Sofia Shevtsov-Tal,Corinne Best,Roei Matan,Sam Aldrin Chandran,Gregory G. Brown,Oren Ostersetzer-Biran +5 more
TL;DR: It is shown that nMAT3-knockout plants are strongly affected in the splicing of nad1 introns i1, i3 and i4 in Arabidopsis mitochondria and the embryo-defect phenotype is tightly associated with complex I biogenesis defects.
Functional flexibility of cyanobacterial light harvesting phycobilisomes enable acclimation to the complex light regime of mixing marine water columns
Noa Bezalel-Hazony,Hagit Zer,Shiri Nathanson,Sofia Shevtsov-Tal,Oren Ostersetzer-Biran,Nir Keren +5 more
TL;DR: In this article , the ability of a phycobilisome-containing marine Synechococcus strain (WH8102) to acclimate to illumination perturbations on this scale was examined.