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Wouter G. van Doorn

Researcher at University of California, Davis

Publications -  84
Citations -  13040

Wouter G. van Doorn is an academic researcher from University of California, Davis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cut flowers & Vase life. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 84 publications receiving 11294 citations. Previous affiliations of Wouter G. van Doorn include Wageningen University and Research Centre.

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Guidelines for the use and interpretation of assays for monitoring autophagy (3rd edition)

Daniel J. Klionsky, +2522 more
- 21 Jan 2016 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a set of guidelines for the selection and interpretation of methods for use by investigators who aim to examine macro-autophagy and related processes, as well as for reviewers who need to provide realistic and reasonable critiques of papers that are focused on these processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Guidelines for the use and interpretation of assays for monitoring autophagy

Daniel J. Klionsky, +1287 more
- 01 Apr 2012 - 
TL;DR: These guidelines are presented for the selection and interpretation of methods for use by investigators who aim to examine macroautophagy and related processes, as well as for reviewers who need to provide realistic and reasonable critiques of papers that are focused on these processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of Ethylene in Senescence of Petals—Morphological and Taxonomical Relationships

TL;DR: The data indicate that ethylene is involved in the natural senescence of only a minority of the wilting type of flowers and in a majority (if not all) of the abscising type of Flowers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physiology and molecular biology of petal senescence

TL;DR: There is not enough experimental support for the widely held view that a gradual increase in cell leakiness, resulting from gradual plasma membrane degradation, is an important event in petal senescence, and rather, rupture of the vacuolar membrane and subsequent rapid, complete degradation of the plasma membrane seems to occur.
Journal ArticleDOI

Classes of programmed cell death in plants, compared to those in animals

TL;DR: It is suggested here that tonoplast rupture and the subsequent rapid destruction of the cytoplasm can distinguish two large PCD classes, and the ‘autolytic’ class of plant PCD, as defined here, can be merged with necrotic PCD in animals.