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Jerry Cohen

· Gordon and Margaret Bailey Professor, Distinguished Graduate Teaching ProfessorVerified

University of Minnesota · Horticultural Science

Active 1959–2024

h-index79
Citations21.7k
Papers35617 last 5y
Funding$3.6M1 active
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Research topics

  • Biology
  • Botany
  • Forestry
  • Ecology
  • Bioinformatics
  • Psychology
  • Social psychology
  • Biochemistry

Selected publications

  • Mother trees, altruistic fungi, and the perils of plant personification

    Trends in Plant Science · 2023 · 35 citations

    • Biology
    • Psychology
    • Social psychology
  • Metabolic signatures of Arabidopsis thaliana abiotic stress responses elucidate patterns in stress priming, acclimation, and recovery

    Stress Biology · 2022 · 40 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Biology
    • Botany
    • Biochemistry

    Temperature, water, and light are three abiotic stress factors that have major influences on plant growth, development, and reproduction. Plants can be primed by a prior mild stress to enhance their resistance to future stress. We used an untargeted metabolomics approach to examine Arabidopsis thaliana 11-day-old seedling's abiotic stress responses including heat (with and without priming), cold (with and without priming), water-deficit and high-light before and after a 2-day-recovery period. Analysis of the physiological phenotypes showed that seedlings with stress treatment resulted in a reduction in fresh weight, hypocotyl and root length but remained viable. Several stress responsive metabolites were identified, confirmed with reference standards, quantified, and clustered. We identified shared and specific stress signatures for cold, heat, water-deficit, and high-light treatments. Central metabolism including amino acid metabolism, sugar metabolism, glycolysis, TCA cycle, GABA shunt, glutathione metabolism, purine metabolism, and urea cycle were found to undergo changes that are fundamentally different, although some shared commonalities in response to different treatments. Large increases in cysteine abundance and decreases in reduced glutathione were observed following multiple stress treatments highlighting the importance of oxidative stress as a general phenomenon in abiotic stress. Large fold increases in low-turnover amino acids and maltose demonstrate the critical role of protein and starch autolysis in early abiotic stress responses.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Janet P. Slovin

    National Institutes of Health

    107 shared
  • Sei Jin Park

    37 shared
  • Jutta Ludwig‐Müller

    TU Dresden

    34 shared
  • Todd J. Cooke

    33 shared
  • Adrian D. Hegeman

    University of Minnesota

    30 shared
  • Alexander Walz

    St. Josefs Hospital

    29 shared
  • Yoshie S. Momonoki

    Tokyo University of Agriculture

    25 shared
  • B. Kaplan

    Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry

    25 shared

Education

  • Ph.D. Plant Biochemistry, Botany and Plant Pathology

    Michigan State University

    1979
  • M.S. Plant Physiology, Botany

    San Diego State University

    1974
  • B.S. Biology (Microbiology), Biology

    University of California Riverside

    1972

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