Mol Plant Microbe Interact
January 2023
Marine spp. are unicellular cyanobacteria widely distributed in the world's oceans. We report the complete genome sequence of sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWinter squash ( cultivar Golden Delicious) produced in Oregon's Willamette Valley for edible seed production has experienced significant yield losses because of a soilborne disease. The symptoms associated with this disease problem include root rot, crown rot, and vascular discoloration in the stems, leading to a severe late season wilt and plant collapse. Through field surveys, , , like fungi, , and were identified to be associated with diseased tissues, and each produced symptoms of root rot, crown rot, or stem discoloration in preliminary pathogenicity trials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStripe rust, caused by the fungus f. sp. , is a worldwide disease of wheat that causes devastating crop losses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The type VI protein secretion system (T6SS) is important in diverse cellular processes in Gram-negative bacteria, including interactions with other bacteria and with eukaryotic hosts. In this study we analyze the evolution of the T6SS in the genus Xanthomonas and evaluate its importance of the T6SS for virulence and in vitro motility in Xanthomonas phaseoli pv. manihotis (Xpm), the causal agent of bacterial blight in cassava (Manihot esculenta).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFis an oomycete that was first isolated from soil, water, and tree foliage in mixed Douglas-fir-tanoak forests of the U.S. Pacific Northwest (PNW).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe accelerated evolution and spread of pathogens are threats to host species. Agrobacteria require an oncogenic Ti or Ri plasmid to transfer genes into plants and cause disease. We developed a strategy to characterize virulence plasmids and applied it to analyze hundreds of strains collected between 1927 and 2017, on six continents and from more than 50 host species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe oomycete is a highly destructive pathogen of cultivated strawberry ( × ), causing the root rotting disease, "red core". The host-pathogen interaction has a well described gene-for-gene resistance relationship, but to date neither candidate avirulence nor resistance genes have been identified. We sequenced a set of American, Canadian, and United Kingdom isolates of known race type, along with three representatives of the closely related pathogen of the raspberry (), , and found a clear population structure, with a high degree of nucleotide divergence seen between some race types and abundant private variation associated with race types 4 and 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Plant Microbe Interact
September 2019
Invasive alien species often have reduced genetic diversity and must adapt to new environments. Given the success of many invasions, this is sometimes called the genetic paradox of invasion. is invasive, limited to asexual reproduction within four lineages, and presumed clonal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Plant Microbe Interact
October 2017
Phytophthora rubi and P. fragariae are two closely related oomycete plant pathogens that exhibit strong morphological and physiological similarities but are specialized to infect different hosts of economic importance, namely, raspberry and strawberry. Here, we report the draft genome sequences of these two Phytophthora species as a first step toward understanding the genomic processes underlying plant host adaptation in these pathogens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhytopathogens have mastered the ability to evade plant innate immunity. In this issue of Cell Host & Microbe, Zhou and colleagues (Li et al., 2016) uncover a strategy whereby a bacterial pathogen disables the plant immune system with such precision as to avoid triggering alarms that could potentially reveal its presence.
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