نتایج جستجو برای: tomato disease

تعداد نتایج: 1513399  

2009
Efrat Glick Yael lEVY Yedidya GafNi

Glick E., Levy Y., Gafni Y. (2009): The viral etiology of tomato yellow leaf curl disease – a review. Plant Protect. Sci., 45: 81–97. Tomato yellow leaf curl disease (TYLCD) is one of the most devastating plant diseases in the world. As a result of its continuing rapid spread, it now afflicts more than 30 tomato growing countries in the Mediterranean basin, southern Asia, Africa, and South, Cen...

2017
Ramadan A Arafa Mohamed T Rakha Nour Elden K Soliman Olfat M Moussa Said M Kamel Kenta Shirasawa

Tomato late blight caused by Phytophthora infestans (Mont.) de Bary, also known as the Irish famine pathogen, is one of the most destructive plant diseases. Wild relatives of tomato possess useful resistance genes against this disease, and could therefore be used in breeding to improve cultivated varieties. In the genome of a wild relative of tomato, Solanum habrochaites accession LA1777, we id...

Tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) is an important member of the Solanaceae family. It is mainly used as food and cash crop globally. Tomato also serves as an ornamental plant in some parts of the world. In urban areas, this crop is included in the foodscaping systems where it is grown in hanging baskets, growing pots and aquaponics for aesthetic and food purposes. Tomato production is m...

2012
Maria Jose Rodríguez-López Elisa Garzo Jean Patrick Bonani Rafael Fernández-Muñoz Enrique Moriones Alberto Fereres

BACKGROUND The whitefly Bemisia tabaci (Genn.) causes dramatic damage to plants by transmitting yield-limiting virus diseases. Previous studies proved that the tomato breeding line ABL 14-8 was resistant to B. tabaci, the vector of tomato yellow leaf curl disease (TYLCD). This resistance is based on the presence of type IV glandular trichomes and acylsucrose production. These trichomes deter se...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2009
Jing Song Joe Win Miaoying Tian Sebastian Schornack Farnusch Kaschani Muhammad Ilyas Renier A L van der Hoorn Sophien Kamoun

Current models of plant-pathogen interactions stipulate that pathogens secrete effector proteins that disable plant defense components known as virulence targets. Occasionally, the perturbations caused by these effectors trigger innate immunity via plant disease resistance proteins as described by the "guard hypothesis." This model is nicely illustrated by the interaction between the fungal pla...

Journal: :Molecular plant pathology 2016
Yvonne Gonzalez-Cendales Ann-Maree Catanzariti Barbara Baker Des J Mcgrath David A Jones

The tomato I-3 and I-7 genes confer resistance to Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici (Fol) race 3 and were introgressed into the cultivated tomato, Solanum lycopersicum, from the wild relative Solanum pennellii. I-3 has been identified previously on chromosome 7 and encodes an S-receptor-like kinase, but little is known about I-7. Molecular markers have been developed for the marker-assisted...

Journal: :The Plant cell 1998
S B Milligan J Bodeau J Yaghoobi I Kaloshian P Zabel V M Williamson

The Mi locus of tomato confers resistance to root knot nematodes. Tomato DNA spanning the locus was isolated as bacterial artificial chromosome clones, and 52 kb of contiguous DNA was sequenced. Three open reading frames were identified with similarity to cloned plant disease resistance genes. Two of them, Mi-1.1 and Mi-1.2, appear to be intact genes; the third is a pseudogene. A 4-kb mRNA hybr...

Journal: :Genetics 2000
Q Pan Y S Liu O Budai-Hadrian M Sela L Carmel-Goren D Zamir R Fluhr

The presence of a single resistance (R) gene allele can determine plant disease resistance. The protein products of such genes may act as receptors that specifically interact with pathogen-derived factors. Most functionally defined R-genes are of the nucleotide binding site-leucine rich repeat (NBS-LRR) supergene family and are present as large multigene families. The specificity of R-gene inte...

2014
Jiafeng Jiang Yufang Lu Jiangang Li Ling Li Xin He Hanliang Shao Yuanhua Dong

This study investigated the effect of cold plasma seed treatment on tomato bacterial wilt, caused by Ralstonia solanacearum (R. solanacearum), and the regulation of resistance mechanisms. The effect of cold plasma of 80W on seed germination, plant growth, nutrient uptake, disease severity, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) concentration and activities of peroxidase (POD; EC 1.11.1.7), polyphenol oxidase...

Journal: :Phytopathology 2011
Julien Levy Aravind Ravindran Dennis Gross Cecilia Tamborindeguy Elizabeth Pierson

Zebra Chip disease is a serious threat to potato production. The pathogen, the phloem-limited bacterium 'Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum,' is vectored by the potato and tomato psyllid Bactericerca cockerelli to potato and tomato. Patterns of pathogen translocation through phloem in potato and tomato plants were examined to determine whether rate or direction of translocation vary by host s...

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