Puccinia triticina causes leaf rust, a disease that causes annual yield losses in wheat. It is an obligate parasite that invades the host leaf and forms intracellular structures called haustoria, which obtain nutrients and suppress host immunity using secreted proteins called effectors. Since effector proteins act at the frontier between plant and pathogen and help determine the outcome of the interaction, it is critical to understand their functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWheat leaf rust is caused by the fungus Puccinia triticina. The genetics of resistance follows the gene-for-gene hypothesis, and thus the presence or absence of a single host resistance gene renders a plant resistant or susceptible to a leaf rust race bearing the corresponding avirulence gene. To investigate some of the changes in the proteomes of both host and pathogen during disease development, a susceptible line of wheat infected with a virulent race of leaf rust were compared to mock-inoculated wheat using 2-DE (with IEF pH 4-8) and MS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe synthesis of hemisuccinates of some derivatives of oleanolic acid is reported, their inhibitory response to experimentally induced gastric ulcers in rats is examined. The hemisuccinates 13a (sodium salt of 13), 14 and 17 are more effective inhibitors than carbenoxolon-sodium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors report on the synthesis of 3-acetyloleanol acid-28-amids 10, 12-16, 19, 20, 22 and 24. The amids 16 (30%) and 24 (37%) were of most favourable inhibiting effect on the formation of gastric ulcera following pylorus ligature. The ulcer formation caused by p.
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