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Pathotoxin-Induced Disease Resistance in Plants

Science, 1969
Primary leaves of bean plants treated with nonphytotoxic concentrations of the pathotoxin victorin were rendered highly resistant to two plant viruses. Leaves treated with higher concentrations of victorin became necrotic. These effects on plants that are resistant to victorin and to the fungus that produces it lend support to the hypothesis that ...
H, Wheeler, T P, Pirone
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Modelling induced resistance to plant diseases

Journal of Theoretical Biology, 2014
Plant disease control has traditionally relied heavily on the use of agrochemicals despite their potentially negative impact on the environment. An alternative strategy is that of induced resistance (IR). However, while IR has proven effective in controlled environments, it has shown variable field efficacy, thus raising questions about its potential ...
Abdul Latif, Nurul S.   +3 more
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Breeding Disease-Resistant Plants

Nature, 1940
THE possibility of raising varieties resistant to virus, bacteria, fungi, and insects is an attractive prospect for the practical plant breeder. Potatoes immune to wart disease, beans resistant to anthracnose, wheat resistant to rust, vines resistant to Phylloxera, and wheat, barley, and oats resistant to Hessian fly, eelworm, and frit fly are ...
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GENETICS OF DISEASE RESISTANCE IN PLANTS

Annual Review of Genetics, 1971
Most plant diseases are infectious. They result from the interaction of two organisms, the host plant which is the suscept of the disease and the patho­ gen which is the causal agent of the disease. A wide array of pathogens cause disease. These include many fungi, bacteria, viruses, mycoplasma, nematodes, and parasitic phanerogams.
A L, Hooker, K M, Saxena
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Molecular Genetics of Plant Disease Resistance

Science, 1995
Plant breeders have used disease resistance genes ( R genes) to control plant disease since the turn of the century. Molecular cloning of R genes that enable plants to resist a diverse range of pathogens has revealed that the proteins encoded by these genes have several features in common ...
B J, Staskawicz   +4 more
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Signals in plant disease resistance

Bulletin de l'Institut Pasteur, 1995
fr Les animaux possedent un systeme immunitaire qui leur permet de developper une resistance aux agents pathogenes, generale, de longue duree et de haute specificite. Apres infection par un agent pathogene necrosant, les plantes peuvent egalement etablir une resistance durable, systemique, mais non specifique, appelee resistance systemique acquise ...
D.A. Dempsey, D.F. Klessig
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The pivotal role of MYB transcription factors in plant disease resistance

Planta, 2023
Yongbo Yu   +7 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

CRISPR Crops: Plant Genome Editing Toward Disease Resistance.

Annual Review of Phytopathology, 2018
Genome editing by sequence-specific nucleases (SSNs) has revolutionized biology by enabling targeted modifications of genomes. Although routine plant genome editing emerged only a few years ago, we are already witnessing the first applications to improve
Thorsten Langner   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Genomic approaches to plant disease resistance

Current Opinion in Plant Biology, 2000
Genomic approaches are beginning to revolutionize our understanding of plant disease resistance. Large-scale sequencing will reveal the detailed organization of resistance-gene clusters and the genetic mechanisms involved in generating new resistance specificities.
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Introduction: disease resistance in plants

Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences, 1972
This paper discusses in general terms the mechanisms proposed to explain the resistance of higher plants to infection and colonization by bacteria and fungi, especially the type of resistance associated with rapid killing of host cells and very limited growth of the pathogen; that is, with the hypersensitive reaction of the plant to infection (h.r ...
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