Prof. Dr. Norbert Sauer



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Types of publications

Journal article
Book chapter / Article in edited volumes
Authored book
Translation
Thesis
Edited Volume
Conference contribution
Other publication type
Unpublished / Preprint

Publication year

From
To

Abstract

Journal

Sucrose transport into barley seeds: Molecular characterization of two transporters and implications for seed development and starch accumulation (2000) Sauer N Journal article, Original article AtSTP3, a green leaf-specific, low affinity monosaccharide H+ symporter of Arabidopsis thaliana (2000) Büttner M, Truernit E, Scholz-Starke J, Sontheim M, Lauterbach C, Huß V, Sauer N Journal article, Original article The AtSUC1 sucrose carrier may represent the osmotic driving force for anther dehiscence and pollen tube growth in Arabidopsis. (1999) Stadler R, Truernit E, Gahrtz M, Sauer N Journal article, Original article Structural analysis of a plant sucrose carrier using monoclonal antibodies and bacteriophage lambda surface display. (1999) Stolz J, Ludwig A, Stadler R, Biesgen C, Hagemann K, Sauer N Journal article, Original article The fenpropimorph resistance gene FEN2 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes a plasma membrane H+-pantothenate symporter. (1999) Stolz J, Sauer N Journal article, Original article Identification of the plasma membrane H+-biotin symporter of Saccharomyces cerevisiae by rescue of a fatty acid-auxotrophic mutant. (1999) Stolz J, Hoja U, Meier S, Sauer N, Schweizer E Journal article, Original article Simple, but not branched, plasmodesmata allow the nonspecific trafficking of proteins in developing tobacco leaves (1999) Imlau A, Sauer N Journal article, Original article Cell-to-cell and long-distance trafficking of the green fluorescent protein in the phloem and symplastic unloading of the protein into sink tissues. (1999) Imlau A, Truernit E, Sauer N Journal article, Original article A male gametophyte-specific monosaccharide transporter in Arabidopsis. (1999) Truernit E, Stadler R, Baier K, Sauer N Journal article, Original article Bacteriophage lambda surface display of a bacterial biotin acceptor domain reveals the minimal peptide size required for biotinylation. (1998) Stolz J, Ludwig A, Sauer N Journal article, Original article