نتایج جستجو برای: leptosphaeria maculans

تعداد نتایج: 374  

Journal: :Organic & biomolecular chemistry 2005
M Soledade C Pedras Mojmir Suchy

Brassilexin and sinalexin are among the most potent antifungal phytoalexins produced by crucifer plants. Nonetheless, the crucifer pathogen Leptosphaeria maculans(Desm.) Ces. et de Not. (asexual stage Phoma lingam(Tode ex Fr.) Desm.) is able to detoxify these phytoalexins. To understand and control these reactions, the elusive brassilexin and sinalexin detoxification pathways in L. maculans wer...

2006
X. Guo X. GUO

This study, intending to understand the effects of crop rotation and tillage on blackleg disease, was conducted in a field at Carman, Manitoba, Canada, from 1999 – 2002. Canola, wheat and flax were among the rotated crops. Rotations were performed under conventional or zero-till conditions. The number of infected plants, infected leaves per plant, lesions per plant, and percentage of leaf cover...

Journal: :Phytopathology 2021

Proteins containing valine-glutamine (VQ) motifs play important roles in plant growth and development as well defense responses to both abiotic biotic stresses. Blackleg disease, which is caused by Leptosphaeria maculans, the most disease canola (Brassica napus) worldwide; however, identification of Brassica napus VQs their functions response blackleg have not yet been reported. In this study, ...

Journal: :Eukaryotic cell 2002
Alexander Idnurm Barbara J Howlett

A pathogenicity gene has been identified in Leptosphaeria maculans, the ascomycetous fungus that causes blackleg disease of canola (Brassica napus). This gene encodes isocitrate lyase, a component of the glyoxylate cycle, and is essential for the successful colonization of B. napus. It was identified by a reverse genetics approach whereby a plasmid conferring hygromycin resistance was inserted ...

2014
Jie Feng Hui Zhang Stephen E. Strelkov Sheau-Fang Hwang

Leptosphaeria maculans is a fungal pathogen causing blackleg in canola. Its virulence has been attributed, among other factors, to the activity of hydrolytic cell wall degrading enzymes (CWDEs). Studies on the pathogenicity function of CWDEs in plant pathogenic fungi have been difficult due to gene redundancy. In microorganisms many CWDE genes are repressed by glucose and derepressed by the fun...

Journal: :FEMS microbiology letters 2005
Donald M Gardiner Barbara J Howlett

Gliotoxin is a secondary metabolite produced by several fungi including the opportunistic animal pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus. It is a member of the epipolythiodioxopiperazine (ETP) class of toxins characterised by a disulphide bridged cyclic dipeptide. A putative cluster of 12 genes involved in gliotoxin biosynthesis has been identified in A. fumigatus by a comparative genomics approach base...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2005
Stephen A Waschuk Arandi G Bezerra Lichi Shi Leonid S Brown

Bacteriorhodopsin-like proteins provide archaea and eubacteria with a unique bioenergetic pathway comprising light-driven transmembrane proton translocation by a single retinal-binding protein. Recently, homologous proteins were found to perform photosensory functions in lower eukaryotes, but no active ion transport by eukaryotic rhodopsins was detected. By demonstrating light-driven proton pum...

Journal: :Molecular plant pathology 2015
Kaveh Ghanbarnia Isabelle Fudal Nicholas J Larkan Matthew G Links Marie-Hélène Balesdent Bronislava Profotova W G Dilantha Fernando Thierry Rouxel M Hossein Borhan

Five avirulence genes from Leptosphaeria maculans, the causal agent of blackleg of canola (Brassica napus), have been identified previously through map-based cloning. In this study, a comparative genomic approach was used to clone the previously mapped AvrLm2. Given the lack of a presence-absence gene polymorphism coincident with the AvrLm2 phenotype, 36 L. maculans isolates were resequenced an...

Journal: :Molecular plant 2008
Candace E Elliott Harjono Barbara J Howlett

Leptosphaeria maculans, a pathogen of Brassica napus, is unable to invade most wild-type accessions of Arabidopsis thaliana, although several mutants are susceptible. The infection pathway of L. maculans via a non-invasive inoculation method on A. thaliana lms1 (undefined), pmr4-1 (defective in callose deposition), and pen1-1 and pen2-1 (defective in non-host responses to several pathogens) mut...

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