نتایج جستجو برای: parasitic plants

تعداد نتایج: 229217  

Journal: :Research in microbiology 2000
C Boursaux-Eude R Gross

Many ants live in complex mutualistic or parasitic relationships with other insects or plants, some of which are classical examples of the mutual benefit of symbiosis. However, only in the past few years have new insights into the symbiosis of ants and microorganisms been reported. Examples are the symbiosis of ants of the genus Camponotus with intracellular bacteria present in their midgut, an...

2017
Juliane K Ishida Satoko Yoshida Ken Shirasu

The family Orobanchaceae includes many parasitic plant species. Parasitic plants invade host vascular tissues and form organs called haustoria, which are used to obtain water and nutrients. Haustorium formation is initiated by host-derived chemicals including quinones and flavonoids. Two types of quinone oxidoreductase (QR) are involved in signal transduction leading to haustorium formation; QR...

Journal: :Tree physiology 2011
T L Bell M A Adams

This review discusses how understanding of functional relationships between parasitic plants and their woody hosts have benefited from a range of approaches to their study. Gross comparisons of nutrient content between infected and uninfected hosts, or parts of hosts, have been widely used to infer basic differences or similarities between hosts and parasites. Coupling of nutrient information w...

2011
Tobias T. Fleischmann Lars B. Scharff Sibah Alkatib Sebastian Hasdorf Mark A. Schöttler Ralph Bock

Plastid genomes of higher plants contain a conserved set of ribosomal protein genes. Although plastid translational activity is essential for cell survival in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), individual plastid ribosomal proteins can be nonessential. Candidates for nonessential plastid ribosomal proteins are ribosomal proteins identified as nonessential in bacteria and those whose genes were lost f...

2012
Nawal M Al-Musayeib Ramzi A Mothana An Matheeussen Paul Cos Louis Maes

BACKGROUND Worldwide particularly in developing countries, a large proportion of the population is at risk for tropical parasitic diseases. Several medicinal plants are still used traditionally against protozoal infections in Yemen and Saudi Arabia. Thus the present study investigated the in vitro antiprotozoal activity of twenty-five plants collected from the Arabian Peninsula. METHODS Plant...

Journal: :Plant science : an international journal of experimental plant biology 2001
Y Goldwasser J I. Yoder

Parasitic plants, including the root holoparasites Orobanche spp., cause devastating damage to crops worldwide. Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) is widely used an amenable model for the study of plant biology, including plant-pathogen interactions. Bringing the two plants together in a controlled system will enable the study of the molecular and genetic basis involved in host-parasitic plant interacti...

Journal: :The Plant cell 2011
Tobias T Fleischmann Lars B Scharff Sibah Alkatib Sebastian Hasdorf Mark A Schöttler Ralph Bock

Plastid genomes of higher plants contain a conserved set of ribosomal protein genes. Although plastid translational activity is essential for cell survival in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), individual plastid ribosomal proteins can be nonessential. Candidates for nonessential plastid ribosomal proteins are ribosomal proteins identified as nonessential in bacteria and those whose genes were lost f...

2013
Xi Li Ti-Cao Zhang Qin Qiao Zhumei Ren Jiayuan Zhao Takahiro Yonezawa Masami Hasegawa M. James C Crabbe Jianqiang Li Yang Zhong

BACKGROUND The central function of chloroplasts is to carry out photosynthesis, and its gene content and structure are highly conserved across land plants. Parasitic plants, which have reduced photosynthetic ability, suffer gene losses from the chloroplast (cp) genome accompanied by the relaxation of selective constraints. Compared with the rapid rise in the number of cp genome sequences of pho...

2015
Bettina Kaiser Gerd Vogg Ursula B. Fürst Markus Albert

By comparison with plant-microbe interaction, little is known about the interaction of parasitic plants with their hosts. Plants of the genus Cuscuta belong to the family of Cuscutaceae and comprise about 200 species, all of which live as stem holoparasites on other plants. Cuscuta spp. possess no roots nor fully expanded leaves and the vegetative portion appears to be a stem only. The parasite...

Journal: :New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research 1970

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