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      Iron content and ferritin in leaves of iron treated Xanthium pensylvanicum plants.

      Plant physiology

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          Abstract

          Iron administration to iron-starved cocklebur (Xanthium pensylvanicum) plants causes an increase in the iron content of ferritin fractions extracted from mature leaves. Xanthium plants grown under long days (vegetative stage) have more iron and ferritin than similarly iron-treated plants induced to flower under short day regimes. This first demonstration of ferritin in cocklebur (Compositae) leaves suggests that a substantial portion of iron that enters the iron-starved plant appears as this protein-iron macromolecule.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Plant Physiol.
          Plant physiology
          0032-0889
          0032-0889
          Jun 1969
          : 44
          : 6
          Article
          396169
          5799045
          d53c6cad-1865-471a-9863-a094a12be2e3
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