نتایج جستجو برای: ustilago maydis

تعداد نتایج: 1484  

Journal: :Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics 2004

Journal: :Revista iberoamericana de micologia 2011
Margarita Juárez-Montiel Sandra Ruiloba de León Griselda Chávez-Camarillo César Hernández-Rodríguez Lourdes Villa-Tanaca

BACKGROUND In recent years the need has arisen to study and develop (or re-discover) foods that have nutritional characteristics as well as specific functions, such as improving health and/or reducing the risk of disease. For this reason knowledge of the nutritional value of food is important to promote greater consumer acceptance. In Mexico huitlacoche (also, cuitlacoche) has traditionally bee...

Journal: :Phytopathology 2010
Hans-Henning Voss Robert L Bowden John F Leslie Thomas Miedaner

Gibberella zeae (anamorph: Fusarium graminearum) is the most common cause of Fusarium head blight (FHB) of wheat (Triticum aestivum) worldwide. Aggressiveness is the most important fungal trait affecting disease severity and stability of host resistance. Objectives were to analyze in two field experiments (i) segregation for aggressiveness among 120 progenies from each of two crosses of highly ...

Journal: :The Plant cell 2007
Lázaro Molina Regine Kahmann

The fungus Ustilago maydis is a biotrophic pathogen of maize (Zea mays). In its genome we have identified an ortholog of YAP1 (for Yeast AP-1-like) from Saccharomyces cerevisae that regulates the oxidative stress response in this organism. yap1 mutants of U. maydis displayed higher sensitivity to H(2)O(2) than wild-type cells, and their virulence was significantly reduced. U. maydis yap1 could ...

Journal: :Journal of Biological Chemistry 1973

Journal: :Eukaryotic cell 2009
Cau D Pham Zhanyang Yu Björn Sandrock Michael Bölker Scott E Gold Michael H Perlin

Proteins of the 14-3-3 and Rho-GTPase families are functionally conserved eukaryotic proteins that participate in many important cellular processes such as signal transduction, cell cycle regulation, malignant transformation, stress response, and apoptosis. However, the exact role(s) of these proteins in these processes is not entirely understood. Using the fungal maize pathogen, Ustilago maydi...

Journal: :Eukaryotic cell 2005
Luis M Larraya Kylie J Boyce Austin So Barbara R Steen Steven Jones Marco Marra James W Kronstad

The switch from budding to filamentous growth is a key aspect of invasive growth and virulence for the fungal phytopathogen Ustilago maydis. The cyclic AMP (cAMP) signaling pathway regulates dimorphism in U. maydis, as demonstrated by the phenotypes of mutants with defects in protein kinase A (PKA). Specifically, a mutant lacking the regulatory subunit of PKA encoded by the ubc1 gene displays a...

Journal: :The New phytologist 2008
Jean J Pan Andrew M Baumgarten Georgiana May

The focus of many fungal endophyte studies has been how plants benefit from endophyte infection. Few studies have investigated the role of the host plant as an environment in shaping endophyte community diversity and composition. The effects that different attributes of the host plant, that is, host genetic variation, host variation in resistance to the fungal pathogen Ustilago maydis and U. ma...

Journal: :Nucleic acids research 1979
G R Banks A Spanos

A glycoprotein which binds to nucleic acids has now been purified from Ustilago maydis until free from detectable deoxyribonuclease activity. It binds to a variety of substrates and in doing so, makes them soluble in dilute trichloroacetic acid. Physical studies suggest that it forms a variety of aggregates under low ionic strength, but at high ionic strength the monomer consists of a single po...

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