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Plant Virus Classification

1969
Publisher Summary In any new and active branch of research, such as the study of plant viruses, various ways of interpreting and classifying information are tried before underlying patterns are revealed, and a stable and useful classification can be made.
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Plant Virus Vectors: Cauliflower Mosaic Virus

1986
Publisher Summary This chapter describes the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV). CaMV is the member of the caulimoviruses that are the only plant viruses known to contain double-stranded DNA. Cloned viral DNA can be introduced directly into plants by rubbing the DNA onto leaves with an abrasive, provided that the bacterial plasmid used to propagate CaMV
N. Brisson, T. Hohn
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Plant virus movement proteins

Cell, 1992
C. Michael Deem,” Moshe Lapidot,t and Roger N. Beachyt *Department of Plant Pathology University of Georgia Athens, Georgia 30602 tDivision of Plant Biology The Scripps Research Institute La Jolla, California 92037 The ease with which plant viruses move throughout their hosts appears quite remarkable, considering that viral progeny must cross the plant
C M, Deom, M, Lapidot, R N, Beachy
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Plant Virus Serology

1967
Publisher Summary The accelerated development of serological studies on plant viruses during the past ten years can be followed easily by simply counting the number of viruses that have proved amenable to serological testing. This steady increase partly reflects the widening applicability and improvements of virus purification methods and seems to ...
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Autophagy in Plant-Virus Interactions

Annual Review of Virology, 2020
Autophagy is a conserved vacuole/lysosome-mediated degradation pathway for clearing and recycling cellular components including cytosol, macromolecules, and dysfunctional organelles. In recent years, autophagy has emerged to play important roles in plant-pathogen interactions. It acts as an antiviral defense mechanism in plants.
Meng, Yang, Asigul, Ismayil, Yule, Liu
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Genetics of Plant Virus Resistance

Annual Review of Phytopathology, 2005
Genetic resistance to plant viruses has been used for at least 80 years to control agricultural losses to viral diseases. To date, hundreds of naturally occurring genes for resistance to plant viruses have been reported from studies of both monocot and dicot crops, their wild relatives, and the plant model, Arabidopsis.
Byoung-Cheorl, Kang   +2 more
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Strategies for virus resistance in plants

Trends in Genetics, 1989
Virus infections of plants are controlled and suppressed naturally by the action of resistance genes encoded within the plant, by interactions between viruses or even as a result of the activity of functions encoded by or associated with the virus itself.
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Plant Virus for Electron Microscopy

Science, 1948
Schiff '8 reagent prepared with thionyl chloride is 1.24; that of Schiff 's reagent prepared in the usual manner is 1.38. This slight difference in acidity does not appear to be significant. Schiff 's reagent prepared with thionyl chloride has been successfully used as a nuclear stain on tissue sections of human thymus gland, kidney, liver, and spleen,
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VALIDATION OF PLANT VIRUS DETECTION

Acta Horticulturae, 2011
Validation of test methods is required for laboratories seeking ISO 17025 accreditation. Recently developed manuals help choosing relevant performance characteristics to be studied for qualitative tests common in plant virus detection. For routine testing in certification schemes additional information on the plant material is important to determine ...
van Schadewijk, A.R.   +3 more
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Assembly of a spherical plant virus

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences, 1976
Abstract The conditions previously reported as necessary for the reassembly of spherical viruses have been distinctly unphysiological and such reassembly cannot be related directly to the in vivo reaction. Mild conditions for the in vitro reassembly of cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV) from its isolated components have now been ...
K W, Adolph, P J, Butler
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