نتایج جستجو برای: suspensor haustorium

تعداد نتایج: 308  

Journal: :Plant physiology 2005
Alexey A Tomilov Natalia B Tomilova Ibrahim Abdallah John I Yoder

Perhaps the most obvious phenotypes associated with chemical signaling between plants are manifested by parasitic species of Orobanchaceae. The development of haustoria, invasive root structures that allow hemiparasitic plants to transition from autotrophic to heterotrophic growth, is rapid, highly synchronous, and readily observed in vitro. Haustorium development is initiated in aseptic roots ...

Journal: :The Plant cell 2010
Pradeepa C G Bandaranayake Tatiana Filappova Alexey Tomilov Natalya B Tomilova Denneal Jamison-McClung Quy Ngo Kentaro Inoue John I Yoder

Parasitic plants in the Orobanchaceae develop haustoria in response to contact with host roots or chemical haustoria-inducing factors. Experiments in this manuscript test the hypothesis that quinolic-inducing factors activate haustorium development via a signal mechanism initiated by redox cycling between quinone and hydroquinone states. Two cDNAs were previously isolated from roots of the para...

Journal: :Eukaryotic cell 2005
Stephen W Martin Lois M Douglas James B Konopka

The regulation of morphogenesis in the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans is under investigation to better understand how the switch between budding and hyphal growth is linked to virulence. Therefore, in this study we examined the ability of C. albicans to undergo a distinct type of morphogenesis to form large thick-walled chlamydospores whose role in infection is unclear, but they act as ...

2013
Xingchun Tang Yuan Liu Yuqing He Ligang Ma Meng-xiang Sun

The roles of cell polarity and the first asymmetric cell division during early embryogenesis in apical-basal cell fate determination remain unclear. Previously, a novel Brassica napus microspore embryogenesis system was established, by which rape exine-dehisced microspores were induced by physical stress. Unlike traditional microspore culture, cell polarity and subsequent asymmetric division ap...

Journal: :Cell 2004
Wolfgang Lukowitz Adrienne Roeder Dana Parmenter Chris Somerville

The Arabidopsis zygote divides asymmetrically into an embryonic apical cell and a basal cell with mostly extra-embryonic fate. This fundamental asymmetry sets the stage for further embryonic development, but the events mediating it are poorly understood. We have identified a MAPKK kinase gene, named YODA, that promotes extra-embryonic cell fates in the basal lineage. In loss-of-function mutants...

2007
Koichi YONEYAMA

Danny JOEL (Israel) President [email protected] Jim WESTWOOD (USA) Vice-President [email protected] Koichi YONEYAMA (Japan) Secretary [email protected] Phillippe DELAVAULT (France) Treasurer [email protected] Diego RUBIALES (Spain) Editor [email protected] Grama DHANAPAL (India) Member [email protected] Fred KANAPIU (Kenya) Member [email protected] S...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2001
D S Jamison J I Yoder

We are using the facultative hemiparasite, Triphysaria, as a model for studying host-parasite signaling in the Scrophulariaceae. Parasitic members of this family form subterranean connections, or haustoria, on neighboring host roots to access host water and nutrients. These parasitic organs develop in response to haustorial-inducing factors contained in host root exudates. A well-characterized ...

Journal: :Journal of experimental botany 2006
M Kuzuya K Yashiro K Tomita H Ezura

Physiological races of powdery mildew (Podosphaera xanthii) cause different symptoms in eight melon lines. Infection by races 1, 2, and 5 was examined in different melon lines. After a compatible reaction, conidia germination, haustorium initiation from the germ tube, germ tube branching, and sporulation occurred within 12, 24, 48, and 120 h, respectively, and the conidia matured within 240 h. ...

Journal: :Japanese Journal of Phytopathology 1937

Journal: :Frontiers in plant science 2015
Xinhua Zhang Oliver Berkowitz Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva Muhan Zhang Guohua Ma James Whelan Jun Duan

Santalum album (sandalwood) is one of the economically important plant species in the Santalaceae for its production of highly valued perfume oils. Sandalwood is also a hemiparasitic tree that obtains some of its water and simple nutrients by tapping into other plants through haustoria which are highly specialized organs in parasitic angiosperms. However, an understanding of the molecular mecha...

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