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RECENT interesting findings

Only Ornamental

Spiritually inspired agnostic mad scientist
Veteran
"Expansion of female sex organs in response to prolonged virginity in Cannabis sativa (marijuana)"

My god, that's almost pornographic. Science! I wonder if that happens to humans?
Try it: If not having sex with your wife for some time gives you a boner, let's it grow down to your feet or up to your chin (depending on age), and even lets sprout a second or third one... :D
 

Betterhaff

Active member
Veteran
Try it: If not having sex with your wife for some time gives you a boner, let's it grow down to your feet or up to your chin (depending on age), and even lets sprout a second or third one... :D
Lol, that reminds me of a joke I can’t remember. But the punch is…one, two, three, four, over shoulder touch the floor.

Yes…it’s hard for students let alone academic institutions to pay for such things.
 

Avinash.miles

Caregiver Extraordinaire
Moderator
ICMag Donor
Veteran
tagging in

Dear Sam,
Is it really necessary to double-post this too? The DNA project, I understand, but literature? I wouldn't say anything were you to critically review them or explain it to the 'normal' people (>90% of the population won't understand what's written in there, let alone see a realistic use for it).
Besides, the above publication is utter BS. For one, they don't mention which C. sativa they used nor from where it came and for another, they determined CBD and THC in it (both always present at equal % with minimal SD, weird). Now to the stupid part: Did you notice that they increased for example THC content in leaves from 0.01% untreated to 0.1% with the highest ethephon dose (100 uM is a lot and will affect growth, senescence, sex determination and a lot more)? IMHO, this is ridiculous and completely useless. I'm not even starting to rant about the materials&methods section...
That's what I tried to tell him :) .

:yeahthats
seems like whoever posts the links to the articles in he first place should be the one that *wants* to elucidate for the community.... open that discussion up....
or not.
 

Only Ornamental

Spiritually inspired agnostic mad scientist
Veteran
Isn't the article concerning flowering stage?
I was just saying that the employed high concentration might affect a lot of things, such as phenotypic sex expression. If I were you I wouldn't lose too much time on thoughts about said publication, it isn't worth it.
 

Dkgrower

Active member
Veteran
First i would like to thanks the poster for the links.

Second, you can go to your local university library and they often let u have free access to there online stuff and then u can save it on a stick or print them out.
 

Sam_Skunkman

"RESIN BREEDER"
Moderator
Veteran
I POSTED 9 MORE on the first page......
If anyone finds a link to the full paper of anything I have posted just abstracts of, let me know and I will add that link also.
Also any explanations, likes or dislikes by anyone is appreciated I just want people to know about what is out there in the science world, good or bad. Some I have read, I will read them all as soon as I can. If enough people like and comment on any papers I will try somehow rate them 1-5 leafs? So folks can start with the best. But so many different interests in this plant and the Cannabinoids and terpenes. If anyone sees a recent great Cannabis paper let me know, and I will add it to my lists.

-SamS
 
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Only Ornamental

Spiritually inspired agnostic mad scientist
Veteran
...And one for OO...
Thanks! Interesting, though not what I was hoping for. Apart from sex chromosomes, plant hormones and environmental factors as elicitors, I still don't know which molecular mechanism or pathway determines sex or rather hermaphroditism in hemp/cannabis. Also, I'm still wondering how one could determine a hermaphrodite based on genetic tests.
 

Sam_Skunkman

"RESIN BREEDER"
Moderator
Veteran
Thanks! Interesting, though not what I was hoping for. Apart from sex chromosomes, plant hormones and environmental factors as elicitors, I still don't know which molecular mechanism or pathway determines sex or rather hermaphroditism in hemp/cannabis. Also, I'm still wondering how one could determine a hermaphrodite based on genetic tests.

Well if it is intersex genetic based DNA test like male and female are it will be easy.
If it is stress based phenotypic expression then there might be several different markers for this stress induced intersex expression, I presume there are. Time will tell, I expect the first intersex marker tests within a year or two.
So a series of markers will be looked for, male, female, and intersex. As well as stress induced intersex expressions.
I do not want intersex genes regardless what they are, if they, any new prospective parent can be tested before being used for breeding, slowly but surely the tide will change and there will be less and less intersex in the western bred drug populations, and that is a good thing for everyone.
I would use them if cheap and available would you?
I can see seeds being sold saying intersex free tested parents used.
It will happen very soon I am sure of it.
-SamS
 

Only Ornamental

Spiritually inspired agnostic mad scientist
Veteran
Well if it is intersex genetic based DNA test like male and female are it will be easy....
LoL. Nope, it won't, it isn't. So far, we have only a very few male markers. Every 'normal' plant contains at least one X chromosome which is slightly smaller than the Y. As far as the current understanding goes, due the smaller size of the X (which basically fits into the Y), a good part of its genes (called pseud-autosomal region) can be recombined with the Y. Hence the current lack of a female marker. On the other hand, the rathe small part of the Y absent on the X gave only rise to a very few (or is it even just MADC2?) male specific markers which don't 'get lost' after a few generations.
These tests only determine the presence (or absence) of a Y chromosome, not sex per se. The last hypothesis I heard of regarding sex determination in hemp was that sex might be determined by the ratio of X to autosomes, not something coded on the Y.
This lacking knowledge on what exactly determines sex in cannabis makes the development of tests so hard. Having the raw DNA sequence or even the full codon including the respective proteins won't help either. What we need is not genes or DNA, we need functions, pathways, control mechanisms, that sorta things. In the end it could be different sets/activities/expression levels of enzymes (has been found but not very accurate), hormones concentrations (has been found for example for auxins but I don't remember if monoecious varieties have been tested as well), or something entirely new or unthought of.
Such tests on the other hand will tell the phenotype. Comparing it with the genotype (XX v.s. XY) reveals if it's a 'pure' sex or a hermaphrodite.
Whether or not this is possible also in very young plants before their sex is determined, I do not know, but Montana Biotech offers such a test (allegedly). If it's going to be possible for stress induced 'hermies'... only time will tell.
If it were my research, I wouldn't start with DNA but functional receptor/pathway-based assays. One problem here is that for many stresses we still haven't found how plants perceive them. We know which stressed do what and via which pathway but too often, the initial receptor is lacking.
If it's receptor based, it's likely going to be on a continuous scale and not black and white (i.e. gene present or not). The progressive loss of hermaphrodites over several generations during selective breeding instead of complete disappearance within 1-2 generations and also the possibility to reduce 'hermies' in likely any population is highly indicative for a QTL. We still don't really understand quantitative traits (such as size or skin colour); still, mostly based on luck, there are a few tests for such traits. But they are a PITA to establish and can't, for the time being, be built upon a known DNA sequence. On the other hand, an understood QTL would allow a test result indicating the % likelihood of phenotypical hermaphroditism.
May such lab test have a material cost of roughly $5 per protein/gene. Dunno why but nearly all I calculated a few years back turned out at that price. This goes only for materials and established tests, ergo 100% commercially available chemicals and reagents. They neglect time and equipment but include running costs such as buffers. Yes, for $5 even I would profit from such tests... But reality looks different and you got to pay quickly $50 and you may need more than one gene/protein. For someone who makes money with it, this is still acceptable but as a hobby gardener not so much.
I'd rather go with a quick&dirty test. Something like this: Take a cutting, put it in 5% glucose solution, wait 3 days and if it doesn't grow more than the control, then...
 

Sam_Skunkman

"RESIN BREEDER"
Moderator
Veteran
To be honest you have not kept up with the latest in DNA sex tests, I bet you are thinking Mandolino or the Japanese? That is about to be left behind. When I am permitted I will post what I am talking about. Until then I will continue to work on a DNA marker test for intersex, I also hope you work on "not genes or DNA, but functions, pathways, control mechanisms, that sorta things. In the end it could be different sets/activities/expression levels of enzymes (has been found but not very accurate), hormones concentrations (has been found for example for auxins but I don't remember if monoecious varieties have been tested as well), or something entirely new or unthought of." That should keep you busy? And in the end we may have both? Better male testing is just around the corner, that I know for sure. But I want intersex tests, that is what I could use and a lot of other people also.
-SamS
 

Only Ornamental

Spiritually inspired agnostic mad scientist
Veteran
To be honest, that's the dam reason I asked! And what do I get from you? As usual, a carrot on a stick. Great, just freaking great!
YES PLEASE, DO GET PERMITTED TO TALK ABOUT.

Again, no. I do not work with cannabis. That's just a hobby.

The first thing me and most others here could learn from you is not about cannabis but networking. You seem to have your hands everywhere and hence are likely to know who does what way before their work gets published (and even proprietary stuff which never will).
You could at least be so kind and explain to me the principle of such a test* you are working on (or letting work on or whatever).
*Is it a random DNA sequence or do you already have the knowledge what exactly links genetic predisposition with sex expression or hermaphroditism? Is it a 'Mendels' gene (recessive, dominant etc.), a QTL, something else? Just give us something, PLEASE!

(Sorry, it keeps saving the post automatically...)
 

Sam_Skunkman

"RESIN BREEDER"
Moderator
Veteran
I will talk when I can, until then I will suggest we will have the ability to determine intersex before long, and better male DNA tests before years end.
-SamS
 

Ollie

Active member
Veteran
Thanks for pushing the knowledge towards us, much appreciated ..

The contributing Work of Yours, is hard to descripe by sole words, due to its critical importance for us, the community ! Jah bless and thanks.

Big up
 

G.O. Joe

Active member
Veteran
No findings of interest, just free advice on article links and downloads.

The sciencedirect articles provide their own permalinks, where it says doi:; copy link location. Or add http://dx.doi.org/ to any and all doi's ever to do the same.

Of all those articles, only Size matters was not available at gen.lib.rus.ec, which is presently the last remaining part of Library Genesis. The article will probably be available later, if gen.lib.rus.ec is. Up to 2 weeks ago, those articles could've been downloaded from one of the libgen.domains; up to last week, at sci-hub - which probably would've given automatic access to the size matters article. But all those are gone, having irritated the Goliath of both science publishing and vampires, Elsevier - publisher of the sciencedirect articles.

If there is something you want to download from gen.lib.rus.ec then, do not delay. Enter the doi and search in scientific articles.
 

Mustafunk

Brand new oldschool
Veteran
Looking for Heslop-Harrison papers

Looking for Heslop-Harrison papers

Hi,

Does anybody have any publications or papers from Heslop-Harrison or any other related to the induction of flowering in Cannabis, the role of daylength, plant age or florigen and so on. Basically trying to undersand how flowering triggers and the maturation time could influenced. Or relation between maturation time and cannabinoid/terpene production.

I'm having some dificulties to find some of those:

Heslop-Harrison J, Heslop-Harrison Y. 1969. Cannabis sativa L. In: Evans LT, ed. The Induction of Flowering. Macmillan, 205-226.

Heslop-Harrison J, Heslop-Harrison Y. 1970. The state of the apex and the response to induction in Cannabis sativa. In: Bernier G, ed. Proceedings of the Symposium on Cellular and Molecular Aspects of Floral Induction, Liege, Belgium. Longmans Green, 3-26.

Heslop-Harrison J, Heslop-Harrison Y. 1958. Studies on flowering-plant growth and organogenesis - III. Leaf shape changes associated with flowering and sex differentiation in Cannabis sativa. Proc.Roy.Irish Acad. 59: 257-283.

Thanks.
 
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Sam_Skunkman

"RESIN BREEDER"
Moderator
Veteran
I posted a new hemp virus paper on the first page in the second group of posted articles,
maybe OO is interested? It can spread the virus by pollen or seeds......
 
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Only Ornamental

Spiritually inspired agnostic mad scientist
Veteran
Interesting indeed. Though it seems to be an asymptomatic virus (fortunately! I'm not complaining :) ).
 

G.O. Joe

Active member
Veteran
sci-hub .org is back online today and that size matters article mentioned earlier plus most anything else from the big publishers can be downloaded there, for now.
 

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