Slow-maturing, determinate peas

Multicellular living organisms and unmodified parts thereof and – Plant – seedling – plant seed – or plant part – per se – Higher plant – seedling – plant seed – or plant part

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C800S278000, C800S260000, C435S410000, C435S420000, C435S430000, C435S421000

Reexamination Certificate

active

07906708

ABSTRACT:
A determinate pea plant, where peas of the pea plant have a wrinkled-seed phenotype, and where the pea plant is slow-maturing.

REFERENCES:
Agrow Seed Co (1974, Plant Variety Protection Certification No. 7100039).
Asgrow Seed Company, Plant Variety Protection Certificate No. 7100039 (1974).
Hedley et al., “An Analysis of Seed Development inPisum sativumII. The Effect of ther-Locus on the Growth and Development of the Seed,”Annals of Botany, 58:371-379 (1986).
Hedley et al., “An Analysis of Seed Development inPisum sativumXVII. The Effect of therbLocus Alone and in Combination withron the Growth and Development of the Seed,”Annals of Botany, 74:365-371 (1994).
International Search Report, International Application No. PCT/US2006/08618 (International Publication No. WO 2006/099152 A2) (Oct. 16, 2007).
W. Brotherton Seed Co., Inc., Plant Variety Protection Certificate No. 7100020 (1974).
Cousin, “Peas (Pisum sativum L.)”,Field Crops Research, 53(1-3):111-130 (1997).
International Preliminary Report on Patentability, International Application No. PCT/US2006/008618 (issued Dec. 6, 2007).
Ratnayake et al., “Pea Starch: Composition, Structure and Properties—A Review”,Starch, 54(6):217-234 (Jun. 2002).
Supplementary European Search Report, European Application EP 06 73 7763 (completed Sep. 24, 2009).
Swiecicki et al., “Localization of Important Traits: The Example Pea (Pisum sativum L.)”,Biotechnology in Agriculture and Forestry, vol. 53 (eds. H. Lorz and G. Wenzel), pp. 155-169, Springer Verlag, Berlin, Germany (Jan. 2005).
Ellis et al., “An Integrated and Comparative View of Pea Genetic and Cytogenetic Maps,” New Phytologist, 153:17-25 (2002).
Foucher et al., “Determinate and Late Flowering are Two Terminal Flower1/Centroradialis Homologs that Control Two Distinct Phases of Flowering Initiation and Development in Pea,” The Plant Cell, 15:2742-2754 (2003).
Makasheva et al., “Determinate Growth Habit (det) in Peas: Isolation, Symbolization, and Linkage,” PNL, 19:31-32 (1987).
Matta et al., “Inheritance and Mapping of Storage Protein Genes inPisum sativumL.,” Heredity, 48(3):383-392 (1982).
Murfet, “Interaction of the det (Determinate) Mutant with Other Flowering Genes,” PNL, 21:44-47 (1989).
Murfet, “Flowering Genes in Pea and their Use in Breeding,” PNL, 22:78-86 (1990).
Swiecicki, “Determinate Growth (det) inPisum; A New Mutant Gene on Chromosome 7,” PNL, 19:72-73 (1987).

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