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The evolutionary phylogeny of the oomycete “fungi”
Protoplasma, 2011Molecular sequencing has helped resolve the phylogenetic relationships amongst the diverse groups of algal, fungal-like and protist organisms that constitute the Chromalveolate "superkingdom" clade. It is thought that the whole clade evolved from a photosynthetic ancestor and that there have been at least three independent plastid losses during their ...
Beakes GW, Glockling SL, Sekimoto S
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Mechanisms and Evolution of Virulence in Oomycetes
Annual Review of Phytopathology, 2012Many destructive diseases of plants and animals are caused by oomycetes, a group of eukaryotic pathogens important to agricultural, ornamental, and natural ecosystems. Understanding the mechanisms underlying oomycete virulence and the genomic processes by which those mechanisms rapidly evolve is essential to developing effective long-term control ...
Rays H Y, Jiang, Brett M, Tyler
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Oomycetes, effectors, and all that jazz
Current Opinion in Plant Biology, 2012Plant pathogenic oomycetes secrete a diverse repertoire of effector proteins that modulate host innate immunity and enable parasitic infection. Understanding how effectors evolve, translocate and traffic inside host cells, and perturb host processes are major themes in the study of oomycete-plant interactions.
Tolga O, Bozkurt +3 more
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2019
Oomycetes are descendants of algal-like microorganisms with a natural predisposition to parasitism. They have very specialist adaptations which allow them to infect and kill countless species of plants, many of whom are important food and cash crops. Their asexual progeny, zoospores, show interesting kinetic behavior which may aid their survival in the
Jacob Hargreaves, Pieter van West
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Oomycetes are descendants of algal-like microorganisms with a natural predisposition to parasitism. They have very specialist adaptations which allow them to infect and kill countless species of plants, many of whom are important food and cash crops. Their asexual progeny, zoospores, show interesting kinetic behavior which may aid their survival in the
Jacob Hargreaves, Pieter van West
openaire +1 more source
Fungal and oomycete genes galore
New Phytologist, 2007Sophien, Kamoun, Stephen B, Goodwin
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