Publications by authors named "YeJuan Du"

Article Synopsis
  • - CLCuMuV (Cotton leaf curl Multan virus) is a DNA virus that primarily affects cotton crops, leading to serious diseases like cotton leaf curl disease, and is transmitted by the whitefly insect vector.
  • - A recent study identified CLCuMuV infection in spinach samples from Xinjiang, China, marking the first reported case of this virus in spinach, characterized by distinct leaf curling and vein thickening symptoms.
  • - The complete genomic sequences of CLCuMuV and its associated betasatellite from spinach were sequenced and deposited in GenBank, showing high nucleotide similarity to other known strains.
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spp., as one of the largest and most heterogeneous genera of hyphomycetes, are widely distributed worldwide. This genus is usually adaptable to a wide variety of extreme environments.

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Postharvest losses of grape berries caused by the pathogenic fungi and have been widely reported, and nitric oxide (NO) as a plant signaling molecule to control postharvest diseases has recently become an active research topic. This study aimed to investigate the regulatory effect of NO on the interaction between grape berries and fungi. During interactions between grape berries and pathogenic fungi, treatment with 10 mM sodium nitroprusside (SNP, an NO donor) delayed the decline of the physiological quality of the grape berries and had positive effects on the weight loss rate, firmness, and respiration intensity.

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Acetolactate synthase (AHAS) catalyses the first common step in the biosynthesis pathways of three branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) of valine, isoleucine and leucine. Here, we characterized one regulatory subunit (VdILV6) and three catalytic subunits (VdILV2A, VdILV2B and VdILV2C) of AHAS from the important cotton Verticillium wilt fungus Verticillium dahliae. Phenotypic analysis showed that VdILV6 knockout mutants were auxotrophic for valine and isoleucine and were defective in conidial morphogenesis, hypha penetration and virulence to cotton, and lost ability of microscletotial formation.

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Verticillium dahliae is a soil-borne phytopathogenic fungus that causes vascular wilt disease in a broad range of hosts. This pathogen survives for many years in soil in the form of melanized microsclerotia. To investigate the melanin synthesis in V.

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