Search results for "spore"

showing 10 items of 252 documents

Myxobolus albin. sp. (Myxozoa) from the Gills of the Common GobyPomatoschistus micropsKrøyer (Teleostei: Gobiidae)

2009

A recent investigation into the myxozoan fauna of common gobies, Pomatoschistus microps, from the Forth Estuary in Scotland, revealed numerous myxosporean cysts within the gill cartilage. They were composed of polysporous plasmodia containing myxobolid spores that were morphologically different from the other known species of Myxobolus and from the myxosporeans previously recorded from this host (i.e. the ceratomyxid Ellipsomyxa gobii, infecting the gall bladder, and the kudoid Kudoa camarguensis, infecting the muscle tissues). Spores were ovoid, 9.4 x 9.1 microm with a thickness of 6.6 microm, with two pyriform polar capsules, the polar filaments of which had four to five turns. Molecular …

GillsGillMolecular Sequence DataSpores ProtozoanZoologyBiologyDNA RibosomalMicrobiologyPomatoschistusRNA Ribosomal 18SAnimalsCluster AnalysisParasite hostingPhylogenyTeleosteiMyxozoaGenes rRNASequence Analysis DNAAnatomyDNA Protozoanbiology.organism_classificationPerciformesCartilageScotlandMyxobolusKudoaMyxobolusTaxonomy (biology)RNA ProtozoanJournal of Eukaryotic Microbiology
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Development of a green fluorescent tagged strain of Aspergillus carbonarius to monitor fungal colonization in grapes.

2011

An enhanced green fluorescent protein has been used to tag an OTA-producing strain of Aspergillus carbonarius (W04-40) isolated from naturally infected grape berries. Transformation of the fungus was mediated by Agrobacterium tumefaciens. The most efficient transformation occurred when the co-cultivation was done with 104 conidia due to higher frequency of resistance colonies (894 per 104 conidia) and lower background obtained. To confirm the presence of the hph gene in hygromycin resistant colonies, 20 putative transformants were screened by PCR analysis. The hph gene was identified in all the transformants. Variation on the expression levels of the eGFP was detected among the transformant…

GrapesOchratoxin productionHyphaGreen Fluorescent ProteinsHyphaeWineFood ContaminationAspergillus carbonariusMicrobiologyGreen fluorescent proteinMicrobiologyConidiumTransformation GeneticATMTGreen fluorescent proteinVitisDNA FungalAspergillusMicroscopy ConfocalbiologyStrain (chemistry)fungiFungal geneticsGene Transfer TechniquesGeneral MedicineAgrobacterium tumefaciensSpores Fungalbiology.organism_classificationOchratoxinsConfocal microscopyTransformation (genetics)Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor)AspergillusAgrobacterium tumefaciensCinnamatesConsumer Product SafetyFruitHygromycin BFood SciencePlasmidsInternational journal of food microbiology
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Host plant and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi show contrasting responses to temperature increase: Implications for dioecious plants

2014

Individual plants live in complex environments where they interact with other organisms such as herbivores, pollinators, fungi and pathogens. The influence of rising temperature on biotic interactions has begun to receive attention, and is an important research frontier currently. However, the belowground interactions with organisms such as arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi have received little attention so far. In this study, we investigated the response of the dioecious plant Antennaria dioica and its AM fungi to increased temperature in a controlled environment simulating the period of growth of A. dioica in central Finland. Specifically, we evaluated the effect of rising temperature on …

HerbivoreHyphabiologyDioecyfungita1183food and beveragesAntennaria dioicaPlant Sciencebiology.organism_classificationArbuscular mycorrhizal fungiSporePollinatorBotanyta1181Agronomy and Crop ScienceChlorophyll fluorescenceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEnvironmental and Experimental Botany
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RCS1, a gene involved in controlling cell size inSaccharomyces cerevisiae

1991

Cloning and sequencing of RCS1, Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene whose product seems to be involved in timing the budding event of the cell cycle, is described. A haploid strain in which the 3'-terminal region of the chromosomal copy of the gene has been disrupted produces cells that are, on average, twice the size of cells of the parental strain. The critical size for budding in the mutant is similarly increased, and the disruption mutation is dominant in a diploid heterozygous for the RCS1 gene. Spores from this diploid have a reduced ability to germinate, the effect being more pronounced in the spores carrying the disrupted copy of RCS1. However, disrupted cells recover from alpha-factor tr…

HeterozygoteMolecular Sequence DataSaccharomyces cerevisiaeMutantBioengineeringSaccharomyces cerevisiaemedicine.disease_causeApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyBiochemistryGeneticsSpore germinationmedicineAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularDNA FungalGeneGene LibraryGeneticsBuddingMutationMembrane GlycoproteinsBase SequencebiologyCell CyclefungiSpores Fungalbiology.organism_classificationYeastMutationPloidyPlasmidsBiotechnologyYeast
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Preventive and post-infection control ofBotrytis cinereain tomato plants by hexanoic acid

2008

The antifungal activity of hexanoic acid on the phytopathogen Botrytis cinerea was studied. This chemical inhibited both spore germination and mycelial growth in vitro in a concentration- and pH-dependent manner, and stopped spore germination at a very early stage, preventing germ-tube development. The minimum fungicidal concentration (MFC) for in vitro spore germination was 16 m m . Hexanoic acid also inhibited in vitro mycelial growth of germinated spores at an MFC of 12 m m . Studies performed to characterize the mechanisms underlying the antimicrobial effect of hexanoic acid showed that it alters fungal membrane permeability. In addition, hexanoic acid treatment increased the levels of …

Hexanoic acidCadaverineMembrane permeabilityfungifood and beveragesPlant ScienceHorticultureBiologybiology.organism_classificationSporechemistry.chemical_compoundHorticulturechemistryBiochemistryGerminationGeneticsPutrescineSpore germinationAgronomy and Crop ScienceBotrytis cinereaPlant Pathology
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Diurnal variation of tree pollen in the air in finland

1984

Abstract The pollen was collected with Burkard spore traps in Turku and Jyvaskyla, in southern and central Finland. Selected days of high concentration were analysed for hour to hour concentrations. The diurnal variation of pollen concentration was variable in Alnus, Betula, Juniperus and Pinus, while Picea, Populus, Quercus, Salix and Ulmus had regular daytime maxima och nightly minima. The pollen concentrations were closely correlated with increasing temperatures and decreasing relative humidities. A significant relationship with wind speed was also found, except in Alnuts and Betula. The most significant relationships with wind speed were found in Salix and Quercus, the pollen of which t…

High concentrationDiurnal temperature variationPlant Sciencemedicine.disease_causeWind speedSporePinus <genus>HorticulturePollenBotanymedicineEnvironmental scienceRegular daytimeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTree pollenGrana
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Observations on spore production in Spilocaea oleagina in southern Italy

1993

Sporogenesis in Spilocaea oleagina was investigated in the field in relation to climatic conditions, in a 2-year trial. At the beginning of each trial, a standard number of infected leaves still attached to the plant were gently scraped in order to remove completely all the fungal structures present on the lesion. At 1-week intervals, four such leaves were detached from the plant, examined in the laboratory for new conidiophores and conidia production, and rated for number of conidia produced by 100 conidiophores. In the first year of the trial, the fungus showed intense activity from the first week of April (beginning of the trial) to the end of April. This activity continued at reduced in…

HorticultureSporogenesisfungiBotanyReduced intensityPlant ScienceHorticultureBiologyAgronomy and Crop ScienceSporeConidiumEPPO Bulletin
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Base composition of DNA from glomalean fungi: high amounts of methylated cytosine.

1997

Glomales (Zygomycetes) are obligate fungal symbionts of roots of land plants and form arbuscular mycorrhiza. Sporal DNA of 10 isolates belonging to nine species was purified and the base composition was determined by RP-HPLC. Base composition fell in a narrow range between 30 and 35% G + C. A high amount of methylated cytosine (mC) accounting for 2-4% of the total nucleotides was found in all taxa. The DNA melting profile was defined for Scutellospora castanea. It corresponded to 32% G + C, and the shape of the denaturation curve suggested a heterogeneity in the GC content within the fungal genome. Knowledge of GC contents and variations between taxa are essential for evaluating nuclear DNA…

Hot Temperature[SDV.GEN] Life Sciences [q-bio]/GeneticsBiologyNucleic Acid DenaturationMicrobiology030308 mycology & parasitology03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundNucleic acid thermodynamicsCytosineBotanyGeneticsDNA FungalChromatography High Pressure Liquid030304 developmental biology[SDV.GEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics0303 health sciencesBase CompositionfungiFungiDNA MethylationSpores Fungalbiology.organism_classificationSporeNuclear DNAArbuscular mycorrhiza5-Methylcytosinechemistry5-MethylcytosineCytosineDNAGC-contentFungal genetics and biology : FGB
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2016

Abstract. Bioaerosols pose risks to human health and agriculture and may influence the evolution of mixed-phase clouds and the hydrological cycle on local and regional scales. The availability and reliability of methods and data on the abundance and properties of atmospheric bioaerosols, however, are rather limited. Here we analyze and compare data from different real-time ultraviolet laser/light-induced fluorescence (UV-LIF) instruments with results from a culture-based spore sampler and offline molecular tracers for airborne fungal spores in a semi-arid forest in the southern Rocky Mountains of Colorado. Commercial UV-APS (ultraviolet aerodynamic particle sizer) and WIBS-3 (wideband integ…

HydrologyAtmospheric Science010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesLevoglucosanIndoor bioaerosol010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesSporeAerosolchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryEnvironmental chemistryTRACERIce nucleusParticleEnvironmental science0105 earth and related environmental sciencesBioaerosolAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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Pythium burgundicum sp. nov. isolated from soil samples taken in French vineyards.

2009

During the course of investigation on pythiaceous fungi occurring in the Burgundian vineyards, a new species of Pythium has been isolated. This oomycete is characterized by its nonproliferating and nonsporulating, spherical to cylindrical type of sporangia (hyphal bodies) germinating through germ tubes, smooth-walled oogonia that are supplied with hypogynous, monoclinous or rarely diclinous antheridia, and smooth-walled oospores. The antheridial cells are very prominent and are reminiscent of Pythium bifurcatum, Pythium segnitium and Pythium longandrum described previously by the author. The internal transcribed spacer region of the rRNA of this new species is composed of 883 bases, which i…

HyphaMolecular Sequence DataHyphaeGerm tubePythiumWineMicrobiologySpecies SpecificityBotanyDNA Ribosomal SpacerGeneticsPythiumInternal transcribed spacerDNA FungalMolecular BiologyPhylogenySoil MicrobiologyOomycetebiologyBase SequenceSporangiumfood and beveragesAgricultureSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationRNA Ribosomal 5.8SAntheridiumOosporeFranceSequence AlignmentFEMS microbiology letters
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