نتایج جستجو برای: witches

تعداد نتایج: 719  

Journal: :Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde / Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia 1984

Journal: :Mycological research 2007
Odalys Garcia Joci A N Macedo Ricardo Tibúrcio Gustavo Zaparoli Johana Rincones Livia M C Bittencourt Geruza O Ceita Fabienne Micheli Abelmon Gesteira Andréa C Mariano Marlene A Schiavinato Francisco J Medrano Lyndel W Meinhardt Gonçalo A G Pereira Júlio C M Cascardo

The hemibiotrophic basidiomycete Moniliophthora perniciosa causes witches' broom disease of Theobroma cacao. Analysis of the M. perniciosa draft genome led to the identification of three putative genes encoding necrosis and ethylene-inducing proteins (MpNEPs), which are apparently located on the same chromosome. MpNEP1 and 2 have highly similar sequences and are able to induce necrosis and ethy...

Journal: :Genetics and molecular research : GMR 2013
B S Andrade C Villela-Dias D S Gomes F Micheli A Góes-Neto

Moniliophthora perniciosa (Stahel) Aime and Phillips-Mora is a hemibiotrophic basidiomycete (Agaricales, Tricholomataceae) that causes witches' broom disease in cocoa (Theobroma cacao L.). This pathogen carries a stable integrated invertron-type linear plasmid in its mitochondrial genome that encodes viral-like DNA and RNA polymerases related to fungal senescence and longevity. After culturing ...

2014
Xibing Cao Guoqiang Fan Zhenli Zhao Minjie Deng Yanpeng Dong

Paulownia witches' broom (PaWB) caused by phytoplasma might result in devastating damage to the growth and wood production of Paulownia. To study the effect of phytoplasma on DNA sequence and to discover the genes related to PaWB occurrence, DNA polymorphisms and DNA methylation levels and patterns in PaWB seedlings, the ones treated with various concentration of methyl methane sulfonate (MMS) ...

Journal: :South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde 2004
Piet Oosthuizen Olge Scholtz Charmaine Hugo Belinda Richards Robin Emsley

821 Discrimination against the mentally ill dates back to antiquity. In classical Greece, people with mental illness were not allowed to walk the streets of the city, and their families were fined if they failed to control them. In the Middle Ages, many of the mentally ill were branded as witches or ‘treated’ by means of starving, flogging and chains. In the first half of the previous century t...

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