Results 311 to 320 of about 464,525 (364)
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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-Vector Relationships

1965
Publisher Summary The chapter discusses a fairly comprehensive account of the main factors in relationships between plant viruses and their vectors. The vectors occur among almost every kind of organism that feeds upon plants and that the relationships consist of all grades from a purely mechanical contamination to a close biological relationship ...
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Plant Virus Evolution

2008
Questions and Concepts in Plant Virus Evolution: a Historical Perspective.- Community Ecology of Plant Viruses.- Emerging Plant Viruses: a Diversity of Mechanisms and Opportunities.- Evolution of Integrated Plant Viruses.- Viroids.- Virus Populations, Mutation Rates and Frequencies.- Genetic Bottlenecks.- Recombination in Plant RNA Viruses.- Symbiosis,
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Plant virus culture

1999
Abstract Plant viruses are distinct from other major host-related groupings of viruses, such as animal or bacterial viruses, in that they are mostly single-stranded messenger-sense ss(+)RNA viruses, and mostly have simple, non-enveloped virions.
E P Rybicki, S Lennox
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Plant Virus Classification

1991
For all types of organism some system of naming and grouping is required, if order is to be created out of chaos. In this respect the viruses which infect the higher plants (Angiospermae) are no exception. In classification schemes, however, if a system is going to stand the test of time, it is essential for individuals to be grouped according to ...
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Plant Virus Replication

1983
The processes involved in plant virus replication may include (1) passage of virus through the cell wall; (2) entry of virus or its nucleic acid into cells and then to replicative sites in cells; (3) removal of protein from nucleic acid, this being termed ‘uncoating’.
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Virus-resistant plants

1991
About 10% of world crop production is lost annually because of plant diseases caused by bacteria, fungi and viruses (Fraser, 1985). Crop losses as a result of virus diseases can be especially serious in developing countries in tropical and subtropical regions.
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Cervical cancer prevention and control in women living with human immunodeficiency virus

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2021
Philip E Castle, Vikrant V Sahasrabuddhe
exaly  

Current treatment and recent progress in gastric cancer

Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2021
Smita S Joshi, Brian D Badgwell
exaly  

PLANT VIRUS SATELLITES

Annual Review of Microbiology, 1985
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