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Search all of LSU Libraries in one place. This includes the catalog, research guides, scholarly repository, website, etc.

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Bento searches all of the available resources at LSU Libraries. Please note that while Discovery does include Catalog results, the dedicated Catalog search can still be accessed.

Discovery
Searches our local print and electronic materials including e-books, journal articles, peer-reviewed articles, news, and magazines.
Research Guides
Searches the full-text of research guides published by LSU Libraries. A research guide is a curated, librarian‑built document that pulls together the most important resources for a topic, course, or assignment. It’s designed to help students, faculty, and researchers quickly find high‑quality, relevant information without having to sift through everything on their own.
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Searches the full-text of the Scholarly Repository. The LSU Scholarly Repository collects, preserves, publishes, and makes openly accessible the research and scholarship contributed by LSU faculty, staff, students, and units. Research and scholarly archived materials can include articles, monographs, books, theses & dissertations, audio-visual presentations, working papers, technical reports, conference proceedings, special collections, data, and publicly funded research.
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Phylogenetic relationships in the harmful dinoflagellate Cochlodinium polykrikoides (Gymnodiniales, Dinophyceae) inferred from LSU rDNA sequences
Phylogenetic relationships among chain-forming Cochlodinium species, including the harmful red tide forming dinoflagellate Cochlodinium polykrikoides, were investigated using specimens collected from coastal waters of Canada, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, México, Philippines, Puerto Rico, and USA. The phylogenetic tree inferred from partial (D1–D6 regions) large subunit ribosomal RNA gene (LSU rDNA) sequences clearly differentiated between C. polykrikoides and a recently described species, Cochlodinium fulvescens. Two samples collected from the Pacific coasts of North America (British Columbia, Canada and California, USA) having typical morphological characters of C. fulvescens such as the sulcus located in the intermediate region of the cingulum, were closely related to C. fulvescens from western Japan in the phylogenetic tree. Cochlodinium polykrikoides formed a monophyletic group positioned as a sister group of the C. fulvescens clade with three well-supported sub-clades. These three clades were composed of (1) East Asian, including specimens collected from Hong Kong, western Japan, and southern Korea, (2) Philippines, from Manila Bay, Philippines and Omura Bay, Japan, and (3) American/Malaysian, from the Atlantic coasts of USA, the Pacific coast of México, Puerto Rico, and Borneo Island, Malaysia. Each of these clades is considered to be a so-called “ribotype” representing the population inhabiting each region, which is distinguished based on ribosomal RNA gene sequences in the species despite similarities in their morphological characters.
Acclimation of Ribulose Bisphosphate Carboxylase and mRNAs to Changing Irradiance in Adult Tobacco Leaves: Differential Expression in LSU and SSU mRNA
The transfer of Nicotiana tabacum plants grown in low light (60 micromoles quanta per square meter per second) to higher light (360 micromoles quanta per square meter per second) was previously shown to induce adaptive stimulation of photosynthetic capacities. The variations of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCo) expression in mature leaves was examined as a result of this acclimation. Maximum or initial activities increased markedly after low- to high-light transfer with a maximum effect after 2 to 3 days. The higher activity is mainly explained by RubisCo protein synthesis as shown by immuno-rocket technique. Small subunits of RubisCo (SSU) mRNA relative content determined by hybridization of total RNA with DNA probe by Dot-blot method, followed the same pattern as RubisCo quantity. The magnitude of this response was amplified when more contrasting light conditions (25 versus 360 micromoles per square meter per second) were established on the same leaf: RubisCo activity, RubisCo protein, and SSU mRNA contents decreased in the shaded zone and increased in the high-light zone within 1 day. After 2 days the shade/light ratio was 1 to 3 for RubisCo protein and 1 to 4 for SSU-RNA, whereas the ratios remained equal to one in controls. Hybridization of the same RNA extracts with large subunits of RubisCo (LSU) probe showed no variation in LSU-RNA content. So in green adult leaves, the expression of SSU and LSU genes is regulated differently. The observed white light quantitative effect on RubisCo expression was not dependent on the photosynthetic rate or assimilate content since low CO 2 concentration around the leaf after the light shift did not modify the response.

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Can I request materials of interest before I arrive?
Yes, you have the option to place requests to view materials in our reading room after you have set up an online account. First, create a Special Collections Request System account (https://specialcollections.lib.lsu.edu/logon) . We highly suggest that you make a request in advance because some materials must be retrieved from an off-site storage facility (requiring 48 business hours of advanced notice) and in-house materials can only be retrieved by staff from our closed stacks. Visit the librarys public catalog. (https://lsu.ent.sirsi.net/client/en_US/lsu) TIP: In the first drop down box that defaults to Everything, simply select Special Collections and then conduct your search. Click on the Request Item link in the catalog record to place your request. Yes, you have the option to place requests to view materials in our reading room after you have set up an online account. First, create a Special Collections Request System account (https://specialcollections.lib.lsu.edu/logon) . We highly suggest that you make a request in advance because some materials must be retrieved from an off-site storage facility (requiring 48 business hours of advanced notice) and in-house materials can only be retrieved by staff from our closed stacks. Visit the librarys public catalog. (https://lsu.ent.sirsi.net/client/en_US/lsu) TIP: In the first drop down box that defaults to Everything, simply select Special Collections and then conduct your search. Click on the Request Item link in the catalog record to place your request. Answered by: Kelly Larson

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