Publications by authors named "M P E van Gent-Pelzer"

One-step RT-qPCR TaqMan assays have been developed for six plant viruses with considerable economic impact in the growing of tulip and lily bulbs: lily mottle virus, lily symptomless virus, lily virus X, Plantago asiatica mosaic virus, tulip breaking virus and tulip virus X. To enhance efficacy and cost-efficiency these assays were combined into multiplex panels. Four different multiplex panels were designed, each consisting of three virus assays and an adapted assay for the housekeeping gene nad5 of lilies and tulips, that acts as an internal amplification control.

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is an important bacterial pathogen causing blackleg (BL) in potatoes. Nevertheless, is often detected in seed lots that do not develop any of the typical blackleg symptoms in the potato crop when planted. Field bioassays identified that strains can be categorized into two distinct classes, some able to cause blackleg symptoms and some unable to do it.

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Background: Resistance to rodenticides has been reported globally and poses a considerable problem for efficacy in pest control. The most-documented resistance to rodenticides in commensal rodents is associated with mutations in the Vkorc1 gene, in particular in codon 139. Resistance to anticoagulant rodenticides has been reported in the Netherlands since 1989.

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is an obligate biotrophic fungus of division Chytridiomycota. It causes potato wart disease, has a worldwide quarantine status and is included on the Health and Human Services and United States Department of Agriculture Select Agent list. isolates are grouped in pathotypes based on their ability to evade host resistance in a set of differential potato varieties.

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Synchytrium endobioticum is an obligate biotrophic soilborne Chytridiomycota (chytrid) species that causes potato wart disease, and represents the most basal lineage among the fungal plant pathogens. We have chosen a functional genomics approach exploiting knowledge acquired from other fungal taxa and compared this to several saprobic and pathogenic chytrid species. Observations linked to obligate biotrophy, genome plasticity and pathogenicity are reported.

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