Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3193341043> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W3193341043 endingPage "173" @default.
- W3193341043 startingPage "151" @default.
- W3193341043 abstract "Abstract Dead wood is mainly composed of cellulose and hemicellulose which are sugar polymers but also of lignin, a polymer of phenolic compounds. Wood is an ecological niche for lignocellulosic saprotrophic fungi which are able to degrade those polymers and use degradation products for their growth. The major component released from wood decay is glucose. In the model yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a saprotrophic but not a lignocellulolytic fungus, glucose is more than a nutrient. It is also a signal molecule reprogramming cell physiology. This phenomenon, described as glucose-induced carbon catabolite repression occurs through signaling cascades interacting with the TOR signaling pathway. In filamentous soft-rot fungi, growing on lignocellulosic materials leads to carbon catabolite repression and involves the TOR signaling pathway in the regulation of this cellular program. White-rot fungi are able to use all woody components including lignin. A carbon catabolite repression program has also been depicted in those fungi. Key actors of this program can be identified in white-rot fungi including segments of a TOR signaling pathway. This review aims to summarize those interplays between carbon catabolite repression and TOR signaling pathway in these different fungi." @default.
- W3193341043 created "2021-08-30" @default.
- W3193341043 creator A5002491683 @default.
- W3193341043 creator A5036739526 @default.
- W3193341043 creator A5055699045 @default.
- W3193341043 date "2021-01-01" @default.
- W3193341043 modified "2023-10-10" @default.
- W3193341043 title "How to rot: A role for TOR. Interplay between carbon catabolite repression and TOR signaling pathway" @default.
- W3193341043 cites W1519294140 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W1589542799 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W1702563147 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W1911402980 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W1970314038 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W1971637500 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W1972389626 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W1983921854 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W1984442538 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W1984860940 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W1986407876 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W1987336079 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2000309611 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2012665233 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2016436273 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2016747889 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2024109444 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2024441330 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2041946854 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2047373064 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2049621216 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2059085198 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2061518442 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2063013559 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2063833575 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2064938664 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2072557743 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2078712945 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2082324597 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2084338561 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2091567823 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2095151352 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2096261603 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2098337864 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2102334779 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2106131218 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2109823034 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2112106854 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2112667487 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2117721962 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2118260141 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2120106989 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2122559203 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2123870108 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2126343422 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2128468829 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2129577900 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2134138119 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2136351852 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2137372494 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2141986377 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2142087914 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2144668112 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2146546288 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2149852723 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2153352656 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2155579360 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2159269304 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2163642241 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2168797545 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2169832274 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2169875902 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2171021541 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2175879646 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2196036958 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2255671650 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2306526634 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2471954354 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2525533364 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2602128860 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2608750574 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2717766076 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2750955513 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2779939194 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2809037922 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2898164859 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2905062760 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2940968218 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2943814572 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2952476275 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2980054850 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2980840115 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W2999421965 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W3007364540 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W3010443092 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W3045245763 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W3096526246 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W3192451754 @default.
- W3193341043 cites W3195642150 @default.
- W3193341043 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/bs.abr.2021.05.002" @default.