Search results for "Germination"

showing 10 items of 251 documents

Understanding of the phenomena involved in the inactivation of bacterial spores by a process combining high pressure and heat treatment

2022

High Pressure Processing (HPP) is an established food processing technique for maintaining food quality while inactivating vegetative forms of pathogenic and spoilage bacteria. However, bacterial spores are very resistant to pressure, which requires the development of a strategy combining HPP with another modality (pressure cycling, heat treatment) to increase spore destruction. Currently, the combination of these processes are not implemented at an industrial scale due to the technically complex implementation and uncertain results given the diverse and contradictory literature on the level and mechanisms of spore inactivation by HP. The elucidation of spore inactivation mechanisms by pres…

SporesHautes Pressions[SPI.GPROC] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Chemical and Process EngineeringGerminationTempératureHeatInactivationHigh Pressure
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Preliminary Results on the Effect of Magnetic Fields on Anther Culture and Pollen Germination of Citrus clementina Hort. ex Tan.

2003

Exposure to electromagnetic fields seems to modify the biological behaviour of seeds, roots, pollen grains and buds of several plants. This procedure has been also suggested as a tool to improve the utilization of plant species (Firetto et al., 2000, 2001, Petruszewski S., 1996). Since the first haploid embryogenic calli production and plantlet regeneration by anther culture of C. clementina Hort. ex Tan. 'Nules' was reported (Germany et al., 1994), several studies have been carried out to improve both the frequency of microspore embryogenesis and the percentage of plantlet regeneration. To enlarge the number of respondent genotypes and to improve the induction rate (the frequency of pollen…

Stamenfood and beveragesHorticultureBiologymedicine.disease_causePlantletSettore AGR/03 - Arboricoltura Generale E Coltivazioni ArboreeHorticulturehaploid organ cultureMicrosporeGerminationCallusPollenBotanymedicinePollen tubePloidy
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Seeds vitality and fungal contamination in Abies nebrodensis

2022

Seeds of Abies nebrodensis were subjected to laboratory tests aimed to detect fungal contaminants and to obtain xenobiotic-free seedlings, by the use of different surface sterilising agents. Moreover, hot water at 60°C was used to suppress any fungal microorganisms colonizing the inner tissues. Alternaria alternata, Aspergillus flavus and Stemphylium vesicarium were the most frequent fungal contaminants. Non-contaminated seeds showed germination values ranging from 0 to 36.4% depending on the applied sterilization protocol. Further analyses will be carried out to establish the influence of these fungi on the seed germination process and their relationship with seedlings of A. nebrodensis.

Stemphylium vesicariumseed surface sterilizationAbies nebrodensiSettore BIO/02 - Botanica Sistematicafungal contaminantAlternaria alternataseed germinationSettore AGR/12 - Patologia VegetalePlant ScienceseedAspergillus flavuEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics
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Germination and storage protein mobilisation of Trifolium subterraneum Var 45C seeds under hypoxic treatment

2007

International audience; The rate, speed and latency period of germination were defined for seeds of Trifolium subterraneum variety 45 C. The latency period was 12 hours on distilled water. The hypoxic stress was applied at the beginning (T12) and the end of latency period (T24). It consists on the addition of nitrogen (N2) under 1 bar pressure in hermetically closed boxes during 2 hours. The germination of treated seeds was then assessed on distilled water. The germination test during hypoxic treatment showed that the hypoxic stress delayed germination, slowing down its speed and decreasing the final percentage of germinated seeds. In order to better understand this depressive effect observ…

TRIFOLIUM SUBTERRANEUM[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio][SDE] Environmental Sciences[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio][SDE]Environmental SciencesGERMINATION
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Inactivation of conidia of Penicillium chrysogenum, P. digitatum and P. italicum by ethanol solutions and vapours

2008

A fractional factorial design, 2(5-1) experiments, was used for assessing the influence of 5 factors: water activity, aw [0.7, 0.9], temperature, T ( degrees C) [10, 30], mode of application, A [liquid, vapour], ethanol concentration, E (% w/w) [5, 10] and time, t (d) [1, 4] on the inactivation of spores of Penicillium chrysogenum, P. digitatum and P. italicum. Survival was determined by germination at optimal conditions within 3d. The experimental response was log (N 0/Nt), where N 0 and Nt (spore ml(-1)) the concentrations of viable spores at t=0 and t respectively. By a decreasing order of sensitivity to ethanol, moulds were ranked as followed: P. digitatum, P. italicum and P. chrysogenu…

Time FactorsWater activityMohoColony Count MicrobialPenicillium chrysogenumMicrobiologyConidiumchemistry.chemical_compoundFood PreservationBotanyFood scienceEthanolDose-Response Relationship DrugEthanolbiologyPenicilliumTemperatureWaterGeneral MedicineSpores Fungalbiology.organism_classificationPenicillium chrysogenumSporechemistryGerminationPenicilliumFood MicrobiologyFood PreservativesGasesFood ScienceInternational Journal of Food Microbiology
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Modeling the effect of ethanol vapor on the germination time of Penicillium chrysogenum.

2005

The influence of ethanol vapor on germination of Penicillium chrysogenum was determined on yeast nitrogen base plus glucose agar medium at 25 degrees C. Ethanol vapors were generated by 0 to 6% (wt/wt) ethanol solutions at the bottom of hermetically closed petri dishes. The logistic equation was used to describe the data as the percentage of germination versus time and to estimate the germination time. The effect of ethanol concentration on germination time was described by a new reparameterized equation, resulting in an estimated limiting ethanol concentration of 4.3%. Up to 3% ethanol, all spores germinated, and the germination time increased with increasing ethanol concentration. At 3.5 …

Time FactorsWater activityconidial germinationphbreadGerm tubePenicillium chrysogenumshelf-life extensionMicrobiologyModels BiologicalLevensmiddelenmicrobiologieAgar platechemistry.chemical_compoundFood Preservationwater activityBotanyFood scienceVLAGEthanolbiologyDose-Response Relationship DrugEthanolspoilagetemperatureSpores FungalPenicillium chrysogenumbiology.organism_classificationYeastSporeKineticsLogistic Modelschemistryclostridium-botulinumGerminationFood Microbiologygrowth-rateFood ScienceJournal of food protection
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Effect of water content and temperature on seed longevity of seven Brassicaceae species after 5 years of storage.

2014

Maximising seed longevity is crucial for genetic resource preservation and longevity of orthodox seeds is determined by environmental conditions (water content and temperature). The effect of water content (down to 0.01 g·H₂O·g(-1) ) on seed viability was studied at different temperatures for a 5-year storage period in taxonomically related species. Seeds of seven Brassicaceae species (Brassica repanda, Eruca vesicaria, Malcolmia littorea, Moricandia arvensis, Rorippa nasturtium-aquaticum, Sinapis alba, Sisymbrium runcinatum) were stored at 48 environments comprising a combination of eight water contents, from 0.21 to 0.01 g·H₂O·g(-1) DW and six temperatures (45, 35, 20, 5, -25, -170 °C). S…

Time Factorsbiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectSinapisLongevityTemperatureHumidityWaterGerminationHumidityPlant ScienceGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationHorticultureRorippaGerminationSisymbriumBotanyBrassicaceaeSeedsDesiccationDesiccationWater contentEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonPlant biology (Stuttgart, Germany)
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A major cysteine proteinase, EPB, in germinating barley seeds: structure of two intronless genes and regulation of expression

1996

The barley cysteine proteinase B (EPB) is the main protease responsible for the degradation of endosperm storage proteins providing nitrogenous nutrients to support the growth of young seedlings. The expression of this enzyme is induced in the germinating seeds by the phytohormone, gibberellin, and suppressed by another phytohormone, abscisic acid. In situ hybridization experiments indicate that EPB is expressed in the scutellar epithelium within 24 h of seed germination, but the aleurone tissue surrounding the starchy endosperm eventually becomes the main tissue expressing this enzyme. The EPB gene family of barley consists of two very similar genes, EPB1 and EPB2, both of which have been …

Transcription GeneticMolecular Sequence DataGerminationPlant ScienceBiologyGenes PlantGene Expression Regulation EnzymologicEndospermGene Expression Regulation PlantAleuroneComplementary DNAGeneticsGene familyAmino Acid SequenceRNA MessengerPromoter Regions GeneticGeneIn Situ HybridizationPhylogenyPlant ProteinsRegulation of gene expressionReporter geneBase SequenceSequence Homology Amino AcidChromosome MappingGene Expression Regulation Developmentalfood and beveragesHordeumGeneral MedicineMolecular biologyIntronsCysteine EndopeptidasesBiochemistryRNA PlantHordeum vulgareAgronomy and Crop SciencePlant Molecular Biology
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Nursery and field evaluation of eggplant grafted onto unrooted cuttings of Solanum torvum Sw.

2014

Abstract Solanum torvum is the eggplant ( Solanum melongena ) relative most commonly used for grafting even if the nursery production of eggplants grafted onto this rootstock has some issues related to its long, irregular and erratic germination and slow growth and development of seedlings. Unrooted cuttings harvested from stock plants could be an alternative propagation material to obtain S. torvum rootstocks and might allow to overcome nursery production issues for eggplant. The aim of this work was to evaluate eggplant suitability to be propagated by unrooted grafted cuttings using S. torvum as rootstock and the influence of this propagation technique on plant yield and fruit quality. A …

Vegetable graftingbiologyCrop yieldNursery productionSettore AGR/04 - Orticoltura E FloricolturaHorticulturebiology.organism_classificationSolanum melongena L.CuttingHorticultureeggplant qualityGerminationSeedlingBotanyunrooted grafted cuttingCultivarSolanum torvumSolanumRootstockScientia Horticulturae
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Significance of the physiological state of fungal spores.

2008

In predictive mycology, most of the studies have been concerned with the influence of some environmental factors on fungal growth and production of mycotoxins, at steady-state. However, fluctuating conditions, interactions between organisms, and the physiological state of the organisms may also exert a profound influence on fungal responses in food and in the environment. In the laboratory, fungal spores are widely used as a biological material. They are produced under optimal conditions then, partially re-hydrated for obtaining standardized spore suspensions. In real conditions, spores are produced under suboptimal conditions and can be submitted to various stresses prior to their germinat…

Water activityMohofungiWaterGeneral MedicineBiologyMycotoxinsSpores Fungalbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyAdaptation PhysiologicalSporeConidiumchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryGerminationConsumer Product SafetyMycologyBotanyFood MicrobiologyFood microbiologyHumansMycotoxinFood ScienceInternational journal of food microbiology
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