14 Clough SJ, Bent AF (1998). Floral dip: a simplified method for Agrobacterium -mediated transformation of Arabidopsis thaliana . Plant J 16, 735-743.
[15]
15 Dai JL, Dong HZ (2011). Stem girdling influences concentrations of endogenous cytokinins and abscisic acid in relation to leaf senescence in cotton. Acta Physiol Plant 33, 1697-1705.
[16]
16 Lin KH, Fu HY, Chan CH, Lo HF, Shih MC, Chang YM, Chen LFO (2008). Generation and analyses of the trans- genic potatoes expressing heterologous thermostable β- amylase. Plant Sci 174, 649-657.
[17]
17 Liu YQ, Chen HK, Li RX (2010). Studies on the isolation and screening of α-amylase producing strain and their enzymatic properties. Agric Sci Technol 11, 56-58, 90.
[18]
18 Pen J, Molendijk L, Quax WJ, Sijmons PC, van Ooyen AJJ, van den Elzen PJM, Rietveld K, Hoekema A (1992). Production of active Bacillus licheniformis alpha-amylase in tobacco and its application in starch liquefaction. Nat Biotechnol 10, 292-296.
[19]
19 Rivera MH, López-Munguía A, Soberón X, Saab-Rincón G (2003). α-amylase from Bacillus licheniformis mutants near to the catalytic site: effects on hydrolytic and transglycosylation activity. Protein Eng 16, 505-514.
[20]
20 Rubio S, Donoso A, Pérez FJ (2014). The dormancy- breaking stimuli “chilling, hypoxia and cyanamide exposure” up-regulate the expression of α-amylase genes in grapevine buds. J Plant Physiol 171, 373-381.
[21]
21 Xu XL, Fang J, Wang W, Guo JL, Chen PN, Cheng JA, Shen ZC (2008). Expression of a bacterial α-amylase gene in transgenic rice seeds. Transgenic Res 17, 645- 650.