نتایج جستجو برای: induced by aspregillus flavus

تعداد نتایج: 7416828  

2010
Imran Rahman

Stefani Svaren Research Assistant School of Hospitality Business Management Washington State University Todd Hall 470 Pullman, WA 99164-4742 [email protected] Abstract This study analyzes the green practices of American hotels. As such, this study examines how eco-friendly, or green, hotels in the United States are in relation to no-cost or low-cost practices. Findings show that chain ho...

2016
Bruce W. Horn Richard M. Gell Rakhi Singh Ronald B. Sorensen Ignazio Carbone Stefanie Pöggeler

Aspergillus flavus colonizes agricultural commodities worldwide and contaminates them with carcinogenic aflatoxins. The high genetic diversity of A. flavus populations is largely due to sexual reproduction characterized by the formation of ascospore-bearing ascocarps embedded within sclerotia. A. flavus is heterothallic and laboratory crosses between strains of the opposite mating type produce ...

Journal: :journal of dentistry, tehran university of medical sciences 0
eslami m baghaii f jalayer nadery n

statement of problem: in recent years, numerous reports have been presented in the literature, about gingival overgrowth induced by nifedipine- a calcium antagonist- prescribed for hypertension and certain types of angina. purpose: the purpose of the present study was to investigate the prevalence rate of nifedipine induced gingival hyperplasia in patients and its probable relationship with age...

2012
Si-Yang Liu Jian-Qing Lin Hong-Long Wu Cheng-Cheng Wang Shu-Jia Huang Yan-Feng Luo Ji-Hua Sun Jian-Xiang Zhou Shu-Jing Yan Jian-Guo He Jun Wang Zhu-Mei He

Aspergillus flavus first gained scientific attention for its production of aflatoxin. The underlying regulation of aflatoxin biosynthesis has been serving as a theoretical model for biosynthesis of other microbial secondary metabolites. Nevertheless, for several decades, the DNA methylation status, one of the important epigenomic modifications involved in gene regulation, in A. flavus remains t...

2014
Katharyn J. Affeldt Joseph Carrig Meareg Amare Nancy P. Keller

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are transmembrane receptors that relay signals from the external environment inside the cell, allowing an organism to adapt to its surroundings. They are known to detect a vast array of ligands, including sugars, amino acids, pheromone peptides, nitrogen sources, oxylipins, and light. Despite their prevalence in fungal genomes, very little is known about the ...

2013
Massimo Reverberi Marta Punelli Valeria Scala Marzia Scarpari Paolo Uva Wieslawa I. Mentzen Andrea L. Dolezal Charles Woloshuk Flavia Pinzari Anna A. Fabbri Corrado Fanelli Gary A. Payne

Aspergillus flavus is a cosmopolitan fungus able to respond to external stimuli and to shift both its trophic behaviour and the production of secondary metabolites, including that of the carcinogen aflatoxin (AF). To better understand the adaptability of this fungus, we examined genetic and phenotypic responses within the fungus when grown under four conditions that mimic different ecological n...

2017
Silin Ren Yuewei Yue Yu Li Xiaodong Guo Shihua Wang

Aflatoxin is a toxic, carcinogenic mycotoxin primarily produced by Aspergillus parasiticus and Aspergillus flavus. Previous studies have predicted the existence of more than 20 genes in the gene cluster involved in aflatoxin biosynthesis. Among these genes, aflK encodes versicolorin B synthase, which converts versiconal to versicolorin B. Past research has investigated aflK in A. parasiticus, b...

Journal: :Fungal genetics and biology : FG & B 2009
Perng-Kuang Chang Bruce W Horn Joe W Dorner

Cyclopiazonic acid (CPA), an indole-tetramic acid mycotoxin, is produced by many species of Aspergillus and Penicillium. In addition to CPA Aspergillus flavus produces polyketide-derived carcinogenic aflatoxins. Aflatoxin biosynthesis genes form a gene cluster in a subtelomeric region. Isolates of A. flavus lacking aflatoxin production due to the loss of the entire aflatoxin gene cluster and po...

Journal: :Phytopathology 2011
H Sudini C R Arias M R Liles K L Bowen R N Huettel

The present study focuses on determining soil fungal community structure in different peanut-cropping sequences by using a high-resolution DNA fingerprinting technique: ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis (RISA). This study was initiated to determine fungal community profiles in four peanut-cropping sequences (continuous peanut, 4 years of continuous bahiagrass followed by peanut, peanut-corn-...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید