Publications by authors named "Cristina O Micali"

Powdery mildews are phytopathogenic ascomycetes that have an obligate biotrophic lifestyle and establish intimate relationships with their plant hosts. A crucial aspect of this plant-fungus interaction is the formation of specialized fungal infection structures termed haustoria. Although located within the cell boundaries of plant epidermal cells, haustoria remain separated from the plant cytoplasm by a host plasma membrane derivative, the extrahaustorial membrane.

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Powdery mildew fungi are biotrophic pathogens that require living plant cells for their growth and reproduction. Elaboration of a specialized cell called a haustorium is essential for their pathogenesis, providing a portal into host cells for nutrient uptake and delivery of virulence effectors. Haustoria are enveloped by a modified plant plasma membrane, the extrahaustorial membrane (EHM), and an extrahaustorial matrix (EHMx), across which molecular exchange must occur, but the origin and composition of this interfacial zone remains obscure.

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Nonself recognition is exemplified in the fungal kingdom by the regulation of cell fusion events between genetically different individuals (heterokaryosis). The het-6 locus is one of approximately 10 loci that control heterokaryon incompatibility during vegetative growth of N. crassa.

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A barrage is a line or zone of demarcation that may develop at the interface where genetically different fungi meet. Barrage formation represents a type of nonself recognition that has often been attributed to the heterokaryon incompatibility system, which limits the co-occurrence of genetically different nuclei in the same cytoplasm during the asexual phase of the life cycle. While the genetic basis of the heterokaryon incompatibility system is well characterized in Neurospora crassa, barrage formation has not been thoroughly investigated.

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