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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

The electrical resistance properties of tree tissues in cankers incited by Endothia parasitica and Nectria galligena.

Sylvia, D. M. 01 January 1977 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
22

Spread of White Hypovirulent Strains of Cryphonectria Parasitica Among American Chestnut Trees at the Lesesne State Forest

Robbins, Nancy 17 February 1998 (has links)
Sixty-two natural cankers on branches and main stems of three 16-year-old grafted American chestnut trees at the Lesesne State Forest were sampled for Cryphonectria parasitica. Cankers were sampled in 1996 and 1997 at various distances from the main stem zone on the grafts (ground to 183 cm) that was inoculated in 1982 and 1983 with a mixture of dsRNA-containing white and pigmented hypovirulent strains. Grafted trees exhibited a high level of blight control, and all bark cores extracted from cankers on the grafted trees showed superficial necrosis. Bark cores extracted from these cankers yielded 156 isolates of C. parasitica. Fifty-three of these isolates were white, and 103 were pigmented. The farthest canker containing a white isolate was located 564 cm from the zone inoculated with hypovirulent strains (H-inoculated zone). The number of white isolates recovered per canker on the grafted trees near the H-inoculated zone (< 0.5 maximum sampling distance) was significantly greater (P=0.0039) than the number of white isolates recovered per canker on the grafted trees far from the H-inoculated zone (>0.5 maximum sampling distance). Lloyd's index of patchiness value for the frequency of white isolates in cankers was 1.36, indicating that white isolates were slightly aggregated in cankers. White isolates of C. parasitica were found in two of seven artificially established cankers 5 months after inoculation with a pigmented virulent strain (WK). Thirteen of 14 pigmented isolates collected from these cankers after 5 months were compatible with WK in vegetative compatibility (VC) tests. Eight of 25 white isolates recovered 5, 11, and 50 months after WK inoculation converted the pigmented WK strain to the white hypovirulent phenotype in vitro. Sixty-five pigmented isolates collected from natural cankers were paired in VC assays, revealing 28 VC groups. All 11 white isolates of C. parasitica assayed contained a 12.7 kb dsRNA in high concentrations. None of 48 pigmented isolates assayed contained dsRNA. All white isolates tested in virulence trials on American chestnut stems in a forest clearcut were hypovirulent, based on low canker severity indices. Little or no dissemination of white strains to cankers on the American chestnut stump sprout clusters, which surround the grafted trees, was found. In the future, to maximize spread of white hypovirulent strains on American chestnut trees, it may be beneficial to re-inoculate trees with hypovirulent strains farther up the main stem after substantial tree growth has occurred. / Master of Science
23

Analyse fonctionnelle de trois effecteurs RXLR de l'oomycète Phytophthora parasitica sécrétés au cours de la pénétration de la plante hôte / Functional analysis of three RXLR effectors from the oomycete Phytophthora parasitica that are secreted during the penetration of host cells

Evangelisti, Édouard 29 November 2013 (has links)
L'agriculture mondiale a connu de profonds changements qui lui ont permis de faire face à l'augmentation constante de la demande alimentaire. Cependant, les conséquences de ces nouvelles pratiques agricoles sur l'environnement et la santé humaine font l'objet de préoccupations croissantes. Notamment, les politiques sanitaires actuelles visent à réduire l'utilisation des produits phytosanitaires. Aussi de nouvelles stratégies de protection des cultures doivent-elles être développées. Une meilleure compréhension des échanges moléculaires qui contribuent au succès des bioagresseurs est nécessaire. Ces échanges impliquent notamment la sécrétion de protéines qui interfèrent avec le métabolisme de l'hôte : les effecteurs. Certains d'entre elles sont accumulés au cours de la pénétration des premières cellules végétales, une étape décisive pour le succès de la tentative d'infection. Les travaux menés au cours de cette thèse se sont concentrés sur 3 de ces effecteurs, sécrétés par l'oomycète Phytophthora parasitica. L'analyse des lignées de surexpression chez Arabidopsis thaliana a permis de mettre en évidence des perturbations du développement et de la physiologie de certaines hormones végétales en réponse à l'accumulation de ces effecteurs. Ces données confirment l'importance de la manipulation des voies hormonales dans le cadre des interactions plantes-pathogènes et soutiennent l'hypothèse récente selon laquelle des effecteurs sécrétés par les agents pathogènes interfèrent avec un petit nombre de cibles clefs du métabolisme de l'hôte. Ces cibles constituent des candidats de choix pour développer des variétés plus résistantes. / Agriculture has undergone deep changes that have allowed to cope with the ever-increasing demand for food. However, the consequences of the new agricultural practices on the environment and human health are the subject of increasing concern. Notably, current health policies aimed at reducing the use of pesticides in agriculture. Thus, new strategies need to be developed for efficient crop protection. In particular, a better understanding of molecular exchanges that contribute to the success of pathogens is required. These exchanges include the secretion of proteins that interfere with host metabolism : the effectors. Some of them are accumulated during the penetration of the first plant cells, a crucial step for the success of the infection attempt. This thesis work focused on three of these effectors, secreted by the oomycete Phytophthora parasitica. The analysis of transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana lines highlighted perturbations of plant development and hormone physiology in response to the accumulation of these effectors. These data confirm the pivotal role of hormonal balance during plant-pathogen interactions and support the recent hypothesis that effectors secreted by evolutionarily distant plant pathogens interfere with a small number of key target host metabolism. These targets are good candidates to develop varieties that are more resistant to infection.
24

L’effecteur Avh195 de Phytophthora parasitica : antagoniste de l’autophagie chez l’hôte et promoteur du processus infectieux / The Phytophthora parasitica effector Avh195 : an antagonist of host autophagy and promoter of the infection cycle

Testi, Serena 26 October 2018 (has links)
L’agent pathogène Phytophthora parasitica est un oomycète qui a des effets dévastateurs sur l’agriculture et les écosystèmes naturels. En tant qu'organisme hémi-biotrophe, il infecte les racines des plantes en établissant d'abord un contact intime avec les cellules hôtes (biotrophie) avant de les tuer (nécrotrophie) et de terminer son cycle d'infection. Pour contrôler ces processus, les oomycètes sécrètent des protéines effectrices, qui sont internalisées dans les cellules végétales par un motif de translocation (appelé RxLR-EER) pour manipuler la physiologie et les réponses immunitaires de l'hôte. Les études des échanges moléculaires entre Phytophthora parasitica et la plante qui ont été menées par le laboratoire d'accueil ont permis d'identifier un effecteur RxLR, dénommé Avh195. La séquence en acides aminés de l'effecteur est caractérisée par la présence de cinq motifs AIM (« ATG8 Interacting Motive ») qui indiquent une interaction potentielle avec la protéine centrale de l’autophagie, ATG8. Avh195 co-localise avec la fraction membranaire de l'ATG8, et un système double-hybride en levure permettant la détermination d’interactions entre protéines membranaires, a confirmé une interaction non sélective entre Avh195 et plusieurs isoformes d'ATG8. La caractérisation de la perturbation de l'autophagie dépendante de Avh195 a été réalisée dans l'algue unicellulaire Chlamydomonas reinhardtii après génération de lignées transgéniques surexprimant l'effecteur. Les analyses par cytométrie de flux ont révélé que Avh195 ne modifie pas la physiologie et la « fitness » de l'algue dans des conditions de croissance normales et pendant l'autophagie induite par la rapamycine. La microscopie électronique à transmission a révélé que l'effecteur provoque dans les cellules de l’algue un retard dans le flux autophagique, se traduisant par une réduction de la coalescence et de la clairance des vacuoles et une forte accumulation d'amidon dans les chloroplastes. Cependant, ce phénotype est transitoire et seulement légèrement lié aux modifications de la régulation transcriptionnelle de la machinerie autophagique. L'analyse de la fonction effectrice chez les plantes a montré que Avh195 retarde le développement de la mort cellulaire hypersensible, déclenchée par un éliciteur d’oomycète. Cette activité dépend de trois AIM sur cinq, ce qui renforce encore l’importance de l’interaction Avh195-ATG8 pour la fonction de l’effecteur. La surexpression stable d'Avh195 chez A. thaliana a permis de déterminer que l'effecteur n'altère pas les réponses immunitaires des plantes, mais favorise globalement le développement de l'agent pathogène, accélérant le passage de la biotrophie à la nécrotrophie au cours de l'infection. À notre connaissance, le travail présenté dans cette thèse représente la première preuve qu'un effecteur d’oomycète possède une activité transitoire, ciblant de manière non sélective la protéine ATG8 dans différents organismes photosynthétiques pour ralentir le flux autophagique, favorisant ainsi le mode de vie hémi-biotrophe d'un agent pathogène. / The plant pathogen Phytophthora parasitica is an oomycete with devastating impact on both agriculture and natural ecosystems. As a hemi-biotrophic organism it infects the roots of plants first establishing an intimate contact with host cells (biotrophy) before killing them (necrotrophy) and completing its infection cycle. To control these processes, oomycetes secrete effector proteins, which are internalized in plant cells by a translocation motif (called RxLR-EER) to manipulate the physiology and the immune responses of the host. Studies of the molecular exchanges between Phytophthora parasitica and the plant that were conducted by the hosting laboratory led to the identification of an RxLR effector, designed to as Avh195. The amino acid sequence of the effector is characterized by the presence of five AIMs (ATG8 interacting motifs), that indicate a potential interaction with the autophagic core protein, ATG8. Avh195 colocalizes with the membrane-bound fraction of ATG8, and a yeast two-hybrid system, which allows to determine interactions between membrane proteins, confirmed a non-selective interaction between Avh195 and several ATG8 isoforms. The characterization of Avh195-dependent autophagy perturbation was carried out in the unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii after generation of transgenic lines overexpressing the effector. Analyses by flow cytometry revealed that Avh195 does not modify the physiology and fitness of the alga, both under normal growth conditions and during rapamycin-induced autophagy. Transmission electron microscopy of cells revealed that the effector provokes a delay in the autophagic flux, manifested as a reduced coalescence and clearance of autophagic vacuoles and a strong accumulation of starch in chloroplasts. However, this phenotype was transient and only slightly related to modifications in the transcriptional regulation of the autophagic machinery. The analysis of effector function in planta showed that Avh195 delays the development of hypersensitive cell death, which is triggered by an oomycete elicitor. This cell death-delaying activity is dependent on three out of five AIMs, further consolidating the importance of the Avh195-ATG8 interaction for the function of the effector. The stable overexpression of Avh195 in A. thaliana allowed to determine that the effector does not impair plant defense responses, but overall promotes the development of the pathogen, accelerating the switch from biotrophy to necrotrophy during infection. To our knowledge, the work presented in this thesis represents the first evidence for an oomycete effector to possess a transitory activity, which targets in a non-selective manner the protein ATG8 in different organisms from the green lineage to slow down autophagic flux, thus promoting the hemibiotrophic life style of a pathogen.
25

Nonself recognition in Neurospora crassa and Cryphonectria parasitica /

Gibbs, Carmen Christine, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M. Sc.)--Carleton University, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 137-145). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
26

Virulence of cryphonectria hypoviruses from previous release sites

Chaloux, Paul Henry. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--West Virginia University, 2000. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains vii, 93 p. : ill. (some col.). Vita. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 75-83).
27

The biological control potential of Cryphonectria parasitica strains containing an infectious cDNA copy of hypovirus CHV1-Euro7

Rittenour, William R. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--West Virginia University, 2005. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains vii, 79 p. : ill. (some col.), col. map. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 68-75).
28

Procedure for Measuring Residual Endothia Parasitica Protease in Curd and Whey From Freshly Coagulated Milk

Patel, Raman B. 01 May 1974 (has links)
Test procedures were developed for measuring the residual milk clotting activity of a protease produced by Endothia parasitica in curd and viii whey separated from freshly coagulated milk. A substrate was prepared by reconstituting 6 g low heat nonfat dry milk in 500 ml buffer containing 50 ml 0.5M cacodylic acid, 50 ml 0.2M CaCl2 , 30 ml 0.2M triethanolamine and 370 ml double distilled water. The substrate was stored at 2 to 4 C for 20 hours before use. Two milliliters of whey or supernatant from centrifuged curd-water slurries were inoculated into 25 ml of substrate at 30 C and the coagulation time noted, and compared with that produced by a known dilution of a standard enzyme solution. Endothia parasitica curd formed at pH 6.7 contained 45 per cent of the enzyme activity added to 454 g milk hut when formed at pH 5.2 the curd contained only 25 per cent. ix The recovery of Endothia parasitica protease in curd was made by preparing a 1:5 curd-water slurry, adjusting to pH 5.4, filtering and testing the filterate.
29

Characterization of <i>Phytophthora</i> Species in Recycled Irrigation Water at a Container Nursery in Southwestern Virginia

Bush, Elizabeth A. 27 June 2002 (has links)
The potential of increasing disease problems through the use of recycled irrigation water in horticultural operations is a serious concern, yet basic research on waterborne plant pathogens in Virginia is lacking. In this work seasonal fluctuations and locations of Pythiaceae in a recycled water irrigation system at a container nursery were determined. <i>Pythium</i> spp. were recovered more frequently and in greater numbers than <i>Phytophthora</i> spp. Species of <i>Phytophthora</i> recovered in filtering assays were identified as <i>P. capsici, P. citricola, P. citrophthora, P. cryptogea, P. drechsleri,</i> and <i>P. nicotianae. P. cryptogea</i> and <i>P. drechsleri</i> were the only <i>Phytophthora</i> spp. recovered from baits placed on the surface of the irrigation reservoir, whereas a greater diversity of species was recovered from baits placed at depths. Hymexazol-amended medium was found to have limitations in recovery of <i>Phytophthora</i> spp. In pathogenicity tests, <i>P. cactorum, P. capsici, P. citrophthora,</i> and <i>P. nicotianae</i> caused significant mortality of <i>Salvia officinalis</i> and <i>P. cactorum</i> showed limited pathogenicity on <i>Gerbera jamesonii</i>. Asymptomatic (aboveground) plants were found to harbor inoculum long after <i>Phytophthora</i>-inoculation. Fresh weight analyses of roots and shoots of asymptomatic plants demonstrated that <i>Phytophthora</i> inoculation may either reduce or stimulate plant shoot growth, but little effect is apparent on roots. Irrigation with naturally infested irrigation water reduced plant growth. This research provides data for prioritizing development of detection technology and management practices for plant pathogens in irrigation water. The results may also lead to improvements in conventional water assay protocols for plant pathogens. / Master of Science
30

Functional Analysis and Characterization of Transporter of Putrescine and Spermidine (TOPAS1) in Phytophthora parasitica

Chakrabarti, Nilanjana 02 August 2017 (has links)
No description available.

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