نتایج جستجو برای: suspensor haustorium

تعداد نتایج: 308  

2001
Russell L. Wrobel John I. Yoder

Haustoria are parasitic plant speci®c organs that locate, attach to, and invade host plant tissues. Parasitic species of the Scrophulariaceae develop haustoria on their roots in response to chemical signals released by host plant roots. Haustorium development was induced in vitro in roots of the parasitic Scrophulariaceae Triphysaria versicolor by treating them with exudates obtained from maize...

2017
Minako Ekawa Koh Aoki

Phelipanche aegyptiaca parasitizes a wide range of plants, including important crops, and causes serious damage to their production. P. aegyptiaca develops a specialized intrusive organ called a haustorium that establishes connections to the host's xylem and phloem. In parallel with the development of xylem vessels, the differentiation of phloem-conducting cells has been demonstrated by the tra...

2013
Pradeepa C.G. Bandaranayake John I. Yoder

6 The ability to develop invasive haustoria is the key feature of parasitic angiosperms. 7 The haustorium attaches the parasite to the host, penetrates the host while keeping 8 its own tissues intact, develops a vascular continuity between the host and parasite 9 and ultimately provides the conduit through which host and parasite materials flow. 10 The ability to make haustoria distinguishes pa...

2014
Diana P. Garnica Adnane Nemri Narayana M. Upadhyaya John P. Rathjen Peter N. Dodds

Rust diseases caused by fungi of the order Pucciniales afflict a wide range of plants, including cereals, legumes, ornamentals, and fruit trees, and pose a serious threat to cropping systems and global food security. The obligate parasitic lifestyle of these fungi and their complex life cycles, often involving alternate hosts for the sexual and asexual stages, also make this group of pathogens ...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2001
M Matvienko M J Torres J I Yoder

Parasitic plants in the Scrophulariaceae use chemicals released by host plant roots to signal developmental processes critical for heterotrophy. Haustoria, parasitic plant structures that attach to and invade host roots, develop on roots of the hemiparasitic plant Triphysaria versicolor within a few hours of exposure to either maize (Zea mays) root exudate or purified haustoria-inducing factors...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2005
Ruth Stadler Christian Lauterbach Norbert Sauer

Developing Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seeds and embryos represent a complex set of cell layers and tissues that mediate the transport and partitioning of carbohydrates, amino acids, hormones, and signaling molecules from the terminal end of the funicular phloem to and between these seed tissues and eventually to the growing embryo. This article provides a detailed analysis of the sympla...

Journal: :The Plant cell 2013
Wenming Wang Yi Zhang Yingqiang Wen Robert Berkey Xianfeng Ma Zhiyong Pan Dipti Bendigeri Harlan King Qiong Zhang Shunyuan Xiao

The Arabidopsis thaliana resistance to powdery mildew8.2 (RPW8.2) protein is specifically targeted to the extrahaustorial membrane (EHM) encasing the haustorium, or fungal feeding structure, where RPW8.2 activates broad-spectrum resistance against powdery mildew pathogens. How RPW8.2 activates defenses at a precise subcellular locale is not known. Here, we report a comprehensive mutational anal...

2011
Yingqiang Wen Wenming Wang Jiayue Feng Ming-Cheng Luo Kenichi Tsuda Fumiaki Katagiri Gary Bauchan Shunyuan Xiao

To better dissect non-host resistance against haustorium-forming powdery mildew pathogens, a sow thistle powdery mildew isolate designated Golovinomyces cichoracearum UMSG1 that has largely overcome penetration resistance but is invariably stopped by post-invasion non-host resistance of Arabidopsis thaliana was identified. The post-invasion non-host resistance is mainly manifested as the format...

Journal: :Journal of experimental botany 2008
Fan Jiang W Dieter Jeschke Wolfram Hartung Duncan D Cameron

The high quality of leguminous hosts for the parasitic plant Rhinanthus minor (in terms of growth and fecundity), compared with forbs (non-leguminous dicots) has long been assumed to be a function of the legume's ability to fix atmospheric nitrogen (N) from the air and the potential for direct transfer of compatible amino compounds to the parasite. Using associations between Rhinanthus minor an...

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