92 results match your criteria: "Research Institute of Phytopathology[Affiliation]"

Draft Genome Sequence of Xanthomonas arboricola Strain 3004, a Causal Agent of Bacterial Disease on Barley.

Genome Announc

February 2015

U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Foreign Disease-Weed Science Research Unit, Ft. Detrick, Maryland, USA.

We report here the annotated genome sequence of Xanthomonas arboricola strain 3004, isolated from barley leaves with symptoms of streak and capable of infecting other plant species. We sequenced the genome of X. arboricola strain 3004 to improve the understanding of molecular mechanisms of the pathogenesis and evolution of the genus Xanthomonas.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Temporal dynamics and population genetic structure of Fusarium graminearum in the upper Midwestern United States.

Fungal Genet Biol

December 2014

Department of Plant Pathology, University of Minnesota, St. Paul 55108, United States; USDA-ARS, Cereal Disease Laboratory, University of Minnesota, St. Paul 55108, United States.

Fusarium graminearum sensu stricto causes Fusarium head blight (FHB) in wheat and barley, and contaminates grains with several trichothecene mycotoxins, causing destructive yield losses and economic impact in the United States. Recently, a F. graminearum strain collected from Minnesota (MN) was determined to produce a novel trichothecene toxin, called NX-2.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many environmental factors, alone or combined, affect organisms by changing a pro-/antioxidant balance. Here we tested rice blast fungus (Magnaporthe oryzae) for possible cross-adaptations caused by relatively intense light and protecting from artificially formed reactive oxygen species (ROS) and ROS-dependent fungitoxic response of the host plant. Spore germination was found to be suppressed under 4-h and, to larger extent, 5-h illumination.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Wheat stripe rust (yellow rust [Yr]), caused by Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici, is an economically important disease of wheat worldwide.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A common consequence of using agricultural fungicides is the development of resistance by fungal pathogens, which undermines reliability of fungicidal effectiveness. A potentially new strategy to aid in overcoming or minimizing this problem is enhancement of pathogen sensitivity to fungicides, or "chemosensitization." Chemosensitization can be accomplished by combining a commercial fungicide with a certain non- or marginally fungicidal substance at levels where, alone, neither compound would be effective.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Potato spindle tuber viroid (PSTVd) is currently widespread in seed potatoes grown in Russia. Characterization of 39 PSTVd isolates collected over a 15-year period from widely separated areas in Russia revealed the presence of 17 different sequence variants, all but one of which were previously unknown. Most variants were recovered only once, but two were more widely distributed; one of these was a mild variant previously isolated in Germany, the second was a novel variant inducing symptoms similar to those of the type strain in tomato.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Oxidative burst and plant disease resistance.

Front Biosci (Elite Ed)

June 2009

Group of Biophysics, Research Institute of Phytopathology, Bolshie Vyazemy, Moscow region, 143050 Russia.

This mini-review summarizes briefly main facts and speculations on roles of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in plant interactions with pathogenic microflora. Examples relating the infection-induced oxidative burst with innate or acquired resistance or susceptibility are provided. Agents triggering ROS production, ROS sources and ROS-involving defense reactions are listed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Four out of six known potato diseases attributed to phytoplasma infection were previously reported to occur in Russia based on a combination of biological properties such as symptomatology and/or vector relationships and electron microscopy of infected phloem tissue. In 2007, the first molecular identification of potato diseases causing symptoms including purple top, round leaves, stunting, bud proliferation and formation of aerial tubers was carried out using PCR methods. A nested PCR using primer pair P1/P7 in the first amplification followed by R16F2n/R16R2n in the second amplification was performed to detect phytoplasma in infected potato samples.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Forty PSTVd isolates collected from five regions of Russia (North-western, Central, Volga region, Northern Caucasus and the Far East) were sequenced during 2006-2008. All isolates lacked the adenine residue present at position 123 of the type strain; i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

First Report of Stem Canker of Salsola tragus Caused by Diaporthe eres in Russia.

Plant Dis

January 2009

Systematic Mycology and Microbiology Laboratory, USDA, ARS, BARC-WEST Beltsville, MD.

Salsola tragus L. (Russian thistle) is a problematic invasive weed in the western United States and a target of biological control efforts. In September of 2007, dying S.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

First Report of Anthracnose of Salsola tragus Caused by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides in Russia.

Plant Dis

September 2008

Foreign Disease-Weed Science Research Unit, USDA, ARS, 1301 Ditto Avenue, Fort Detrick, MD 21702-5023.

In October of 2006, dying Salsola tragus L. (Russian thistle, tumbleweed), family Chenopodiaceae, plants were found along the Azov Sea at Chushka, Russia. Approximately 40 plants in the area were diseased and almost 80% of these were dying.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Phytoplasmal diseases have long been suspected to occur in several potato-growing regions in Russia on the basis of symptoms and the presence of insect vectors. Symptoms resembling stolbur are most prevalent, but round leaf disease, potato witches'-broom, and potato purple top wilt also occur (1). The phytoplasma etiologies of these diseases have never been verified by molecular means.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

First described in the early 1930s, the limited distribution of potato "gothic" disease made it of little economic significance in European Russia until the early 1970s when meristem-tip culture was widely adopted throughout the former USSR to increase production of virus-free seed potatoes. Shortly thereafter, the yield and quality of Russian seed potatoes began a dramatic decline. Symptoms of potato "gothic" resemble those of Potato spindle tuber viroid (PSTVd) (3), and initial suspicions that in vitro plantlets and seed potatoes might be viroid-infected were later proved correct when Kastalyeva et al.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Thirteen domestic and foreign oat cultivars and eight breeding lines bred from the University of Illinois were evaluated for resistance to barley yellow dwarf (BYD) using artificial inoculation with Rhopalosiphum padi viruliferous for an isolate of Barley yellow dwarf virus-PAV endemic to Moscow region origin. Cultivar Blaze and six Illinois lines showed the best grain yields under disease pressure that resembled a BYD epidemic.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

[A comparative analysis of Stachybotrys chartarum strains isolated in Russia].

Mikrobiologiia

July 2004

All-Russia Research Institute of Phytopathology, Russian Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Bol'shie Vyazemy, Moscow Oblast, 143050 Russia.

This work deals with a comparative analysis of Stachybotrys chartarum strains isolated from various artificial cellulose-containing materials and natural substrates in the geographically distant regions of Russia. The analysis included the determination of the spore size, the strain toxicity to Paramecium caudatum, the strain resistance to the fungicides Benomil, Olilen, and Tilt, and the PCR study of the genome structure with the aid of a primer that was complementary to the core sequence of the SINE retrotransposon. It was found that some of the strains that were isolated from different areas and from different substrates differ in their toxicity, fungicide resistance, and genome structure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Exogenous riboflavin and its dimethylated amino(nor)-derivative roseoflavin were studied in their ability to protect susceptible rice plants from blast disease and to induce fungitoxicity mediated by active oxygen. Both compounds, either added to the inoculum (10 microg/ml) or to soil (40 mg/kg, two days prior to inoculation), induced disease resistance, i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF