نتایج جستجو برای: botrytis cinerea

تعداد نتایج: 4012  

Journal: :Frontiers in plant science 2016
Anushen Sivakumaran Aderemi Akinyemi Julian Mandon Simona M. Cristescu Michael A. Hall Frans J. M. Harren Luis A. J. Mur

Abscisic acid (ABA) production has emerged a susceptibility factor in plant-pathogen interactions. This work examined the interaction of ABA with nitric oxide (NO) in tomato following challenge with the ABA-synthesizing pathogen, Botrytis cinerea. Trace gas detection using a quantum cascade laser detected NO production within minutes of challenge with B. cinerea whilst photoacoustic laser detec...

2012
Bo Zhu Qing Zhou Guanlin Xie Guoqing Zhang Xiaowei Zhang Yanli Wang Gunchang Sun Bin Li Gulei Jin

The ascomycete Botrytis cinerea is a phytopathogenic fungus infecting and causing significant yield losses in a number of crops. The genome of B. cinerea has been fully sequenced while the importance of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) to extend the host range in plant pathogenic fungi has been recently appreciated. However, recent data confirm that the B. cinerea fungus shares conserved virulenc...

2016
Boqiang Li Huaimin Peng Shiping Tian

Rhodotorula glutinis as an antagonism show good biocontrol performance against various post-harvest diseases in fruits. In the present study, strong attachment capability of R. glutinis to spores and hyphae of Botrytis cinerea was observed. Further analysis showed that certain protein components on the yeast cell surface played critical role during the interaction between R. glutinis and B. cin...

2018
Han-Cheng Wang Li-Cui Li Bin Cai Liu-Ti Cai Xing-Jiang Chen Zhi-He Yu Chuan-Qing Zhang

Botrytis cinerea, which causes gray mold, is an important pathogen in four important economic crops, tomato, tobacco, cucumber and strawberry, in China and worldwide. Metabolic phenomics data on B. cinerea isolates from these four crops were characterized and compared for 950 phenotypes with a BIOLOG Phenotype MicroArray (PM). The results showed that the metabolic fingerprints of the four B. ci...

Journal: :The Plant cell 2003
Simone Ferrari Donatella Vairo Frederick M Ausubel Felice Cervone Giulia De Lorenzo

Polygalacturonase-inhibiting proteins (PGIPs) are plant proteins that counteract fungal polygalacturonases, which are important virulence factors. Like many other plant defense proteins, PGIPs are encoded by gene families, but the roles of individual genes in these families are poorly understood. Here, we show that in Arabidopsis, two tandemly duplicated PGIP genes are upregulated coordinately ...

Journal: :Journal of Asian natural products research 2008
Tian-Shan Wang Jin-Yan Zhou Hong Tan

Three new metabolites, gamma-abscisolactone (1), botrytisic acids A (3) and B (4) were isolated from the fermentation broth of Botrytis cinerea TB-3-H8. Their structures were elucidated on the basis of MS, IR, UV, and NMR spectroscopic data. Compound 2 was isolated from natural resource for the first time. The structure of 1 was further confirmed by single-crystal X-ray diffraction (CCDC-265897).

Journal: :Molecular plant-microbe interactions : MPMI 1997
C J van der Vlugt-Bergmans C A Wagemakers J A van Kan

Cutinase of Botrytis cinerea has been suggested to play an important role in penetration of host tissues. A protein fraction with cutin hydrolyzing activity was purified from culture filtrates of B. cinerea induced for cutinase activity. An 18-kDa protein in this fraction was identified as cutinase and the corresponding gene cutA was cloned. The gene is present in a single copy in the genome of...

2017
Wenyong Shao Chiyuan Lv Yu Zhang Jin Wang Changjun Chen

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Elongator complex consisting of the six Elp1-Elp6 proteins has been proposed to participate in three distinct cellular processes: transcriptional elongation, polarized exocytosis and formation of modified wobble uridines in tRNA. In this study, we investigated the function of BcElp4 in Botrytis cinerea, which is homologous to S. cerevisiae Elp4. A bcelp4 deletion mu...

2016
Rouhallah Sharifi Choong-Min Ryu

Bacterial volatiles protect plants either by directly inhibiting a pathogenic fungus or by improving the defense capabilities of plants. The effect of bacterial volatiles on fungal growth was dose-dependent. A low dosage did not have a noticeable effect on Botrytis cinerea growth and development, but was sufficient to elicit induced resistance in Arabidopsis thaliana. Bacterial volatiles displa...

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