15 results on '"Davey JF"'
Search Results
2. First Report of Mefenoxam-Resistant Isolates of Phytophthora capsici from Lima Bean Pods in the Mid-Atlantic Region.
- Author
-
Davey JF, Gregory NF, Mulrooney RP, Evans TA, and Carroll RB
- Abstract
Phytophthora capsici Leonian, the causal agent of lima bean pod rot, was first identified as a pathogen of lima bean in 2002 (1) and poses a new threat to lima bean (Phaseolus lunatus L.) production in the Mid-Atlantic Region. The phenylamide fungicide mefenoxam (Ridomil Gold; Syngenta Crop Protection) is widely used in the region for controlling foliar and soilborne diseases caused by Oomycetes. Isolates of P. capsici were collected from lima bean pods from production fields in Delaware, Maryland, and New Jersey from 1998 to 2004. These isolates originated from survey samples of lima bean fields for another pathogen, P. phaseoli, in 1999 and 2000 and diagnostic samples were submitted to the Plant Disease Clinic. Isolates were from lima bean, except for one from pepper (basal stem). Identification was made on the basis of morphometric characteristics. No known sensitive or insensitive isolates were included in the evaluation. Single zoospore cultures were evaluated for mefenoxam sensitivity on V8 agar plates amended with 100 ppm of mefenoxam, a previously tested concentration (2). Seven-millimeter-diameter agar plugs of each isolate were cut from the edge of actively expanding cultures of P. capsici with a cork borer and transferred to three V8 agar plates amended with mefenoxam and three unamended V8 plates. The plates were arranged in a completely randomized design and incubated at 25°C in the dark for 3 days. After incubation, colony growth was measured in millimeters and averaged for the three replicate plates of each isolate and percent growth relative to the unamended control was calculated. Mefenoxam sensitivity was assigned according to methods of Lamour et al. (2). The experiment was repeated once, and also run with a treatment of 200 ppm of mefenoxam. Of sixteen isolates screened, nine were rated as sensitive, four were intermediately resistant, and three were resistant. There was no difference between the 100 and 200 ppm results, except for a slight increase in sensitivity for one isolate. A subsequent experiment tested five isolates at concentrations of 1, 10, 100, and 1,000 ppm. Results were consistent with previous tests, with resistant isolates exhibiting some growth at the highest concentration of mefenoxam. One resistant isolate was from a field in Delaware previously cropped to slicing cucumbers with a history of mefenoxam applications. The second was from Caroline County, MD, which is heavily cropped to pickling cucumbers and likely to have been exposed to mefanoxam applications for the control of fruit rot; the origin of the third insensitive isolate from lima bean is unknown. Mefanoxam usage on lima bean is usually limited to one foliar application of mefenoxam+copper hydroxide to control downy mildew in the fall crop in wet seasons. This study indicates that mefenoxam resistance is present in populations of P. capsici in lima bean fields in the Mid-Atlantic Region, presumably as a result of mefenoxam applications to other vegetable crops, principally cucurbits, which are planted in rotation with lima beans or from nearby cucurbit fields. Implementing strategies to minimize fungicide resistance in other vegetables is important to slow resistance development associated with this emerging pathogen on lima beans. Lima bean pod rot continues to be seen sporadically each year in fields with a history of P. capsici and abundant rainfall or excessive irrigation. References: (1) C. R. Davidson et al. Plant Dis. 86:1049, 2002. (2) K. H. Lamour et al. Phytopathology 90:396, 2000.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Liquid chromatographic analysis of amino acids in physiological fluids: recent advances.
- Author
-
Ersser RS and Davey JF
- Subjects
- Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid instrumentation, Indicators and Reagents chemistry, Amino Acids analysis, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid methods
- Abstract
Amino acid analysers have been used for the quantitative investigation of amino acids in physiological fluids for over 30 years. Advances in technology have resulted in a steady decrease in analysis time and detection limits of the cation-exchange chromatography, followed by ninhydrin detection, used by the original instruments. The introduction of pre-column derivatisation and alternative HPLC techniques offers new opportunities for advancement. The analytical characteristics, principles, merits and limitations of both techniques are discussed, and their suitability for clinical purposes assessed. Practical considerations are emphasised and the influence of choice of chemistry and instrument design on the resolution and quality of quantitative data is highlighted.
- Published
- 1991
4. Amino acid analysis of physiological fluids by high-performance liquid chromatography with phenylisothiocyanate derivatization and comparison with ion-exchange chromatography.
- Author
-
Davey JF and Ersser RS
- Subjects
- Amino Acids blood, Amino Acids urine, Amniotic Fluid analysis, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid methods, Chromatography, Ion Exchange methods, Female, Humans, Indicators and Reagents, Isothiocyanates, Pregnancy, Thiocyanates, Amino Acids analysis
- Abstract
The suitability of pre-column derivatization with phenylisothiocyanate followed by high-performance liquid chromatography was investigated as a means of analyzing free amino acids in plasma and other physiological fluids. A comparison was made between this method and a conventional ion-exchange method. The correlation coefficient for all the amino acids tested was greater than 0.9, except for proline and tryptophan. Various forms of sample preparation were tried for plasma and amniotic fluid; it was finally decided that protein precipitation with acetonitrile was most suitable. Ultrafiltration was used for cerebrospinal fluid preparation while urine was treated the same as a standard mixture. The retention times relative to the internal standard (nor-leucine) are given for over 90 compounds. Some of these were chromatographed underivatized because they are known to be present in some physiological fluids and absorb at 254 nm because of their aromaticity. The imprecision for this method compared favourably with the standard ion-exchange method although each had specific amino acids for which the imprecision was poor. The technique is suitable for the same routine clinical analysis purposes as high-resolution ion-exchange chromatography. It also offers the advantages of speed of analysis, sensitivity and equipment versatility over the conventional ion-exchange methods.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A radioimmunoassay of human prealbumin in body fluids.
- Author
-
Cowley DM, Davey JF, and Hjelm NM
- Subjects
- Amniotic Fluid analysis, Body Fluids analysis, Duodenum analysis, Female, Humans, Immunoenzyme Techniques, Prealbumin cerebrospinal fluid, Pregnancy, Radioimmunoassay methods, Prealbumin analysis
- Abstract
Prealbumin (PA) was purified 35-fold from human serum and antibodies raised against it in rabbits. A 2-hour radioimmunoassay (RIA) using polyethyleneglycol (PEG) to separate bound and free PA was used to determine levels in body fluids. Using patient serum specimens the new method was compared with an electroimmunoassay (EIA) method and the regression equation obtained was: y = 1.13x - 9.91. The RIA and EIA methods compared favourably with respect to precision to practicability and economy. The RIA method seems especially suitable for large scale assays of PA and is 100 times more sensitive than EIA. Preliminary estimations of PA with the RIA method in plasma, cerebrospinal fluids, amniotic fluids, duodenal juices and urines were carried out. The results indicate that this method can be conveniently used to assay PA in body fluids where the protein is present in low concentration.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The metabolism of trans-cyclohexan-1,2-diol by an Acinetobacter species.
- Author
-
Davey JF and Trudgill PW
- Subjects
- Alcohol Oxidoreductases isolation & purification, Alcohol Oxidoreductases metabolism, Chromatography, Gas, Isomerases isolation & purification, Isomerases metabolism, Kinetics, Mixed Function Oxygenases metabolism, Nocardia metabolism, Species Specificity, Subcellular Fractions metabolism, Acinetobacter metabolism, Cyclohexanols metabolism
- Abstract
1. Acinetobacter TD63 was one of some thirty organisms isolated by elective culture with trans-cyclohexan-1,2-diol as sole source of carbon. The great majority of these isolates displayed the same growth spectrum as Nocardia globerula CL1 and Acinetobacter NCIB 9871 being capable of utilizing trans-cyclohexan-1,2-diol, 2-hydroxycyclohexan-1-one, cyclohexanol, cyclohexanone,1-oxa-2oxocycloheptane and adipate and were assumed to use well described metabolic pathways. 2. Acinetobacter TD63 was distinctive in being incapable of growth with cyclohexanol, cyclohexanone or 1-oxa-2-oxocycloheptane and because of this it was hoped that it would display an alternative pathway for the oxidation of trans-cyclohexan-1,2-diol. 3. Studies with cell extracts have shown the presence of inducible dehydrogenase for the conversion of trans-cyclohexan-1,2-diol to 2-hydroxycyclohexan-1-one and cyclohexan-1,2-dione and of 6-oxohexanoate to adipate. These enzymes are linked into a metabolic sequence by the action of a monooxygenase of broad specificity but efficiently capable of converting 2-hydroxy-cyclohexan-1-one into the lactone 1-oxa-2-oxo-7-hydroxycycloheptane that spontaneously rearranges to yield 6-oxohexanoate. 4. An enzyme capable of attacking cyclohexan-1,2-dione (mono-enol) in the absence of an electron donor or oxygen has also been detected. Evidence has been presented indicating that this enzyme catalyses a keto-enol tautomerization between cyclohexan-1,2-dione (mono-enol) and cyclohexan-1,2-dione (mono-hydrate) and is not involved in the pathway of ring cleavage. 5. The failure of Acinetobacter TD63 to grow with cyclohexanol, cyclohexanone or 1-oxa-2-oxocycloheptane is due not to this organism possessing a distinctive metabolic sequence but to a narrow inducer specificity coupled with an inability to form a lactone hydrolase enabling it to cleave the stable 1-oxa-2-oxocycloheptane which is an intermediate in the established pathway of cyclohexanol and cyclohexanone oxidation.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Bacterial metabolism of para- and meta-xylene: oxidation of a methyl substituent.
- Author
-
Davey JF and Gibson DT
- Subjects
- Alcohol Oxidoreductases metabolism, Aldehyde Oxidoreductases metabolism, Benzoates metabolism, Catechols biosynthesis, Catechols metabolism, Cell-Free System, Chemical Phenomena, Chemistry, Methylation, Mutagens, Mutation, Nitrosoguanidines, Oxidation-Reduction, Oxygenases metabolism, Pseudomonas enzymology, Succinates metabolism, Toluene metabolism, Pseudomonas metabolism, Xylenes metabolism
- Abstract
Pseudomonas Pxy was isolated on p-xylene as sole source of carbon and energy. Substrates that supported growth were toluene, p-methylbenzyl alcohol, p-tolualdehyde, p-toluic acid, and the analogous m-methyl derivatives, including m-xylene. Cell extracts prepared from Pseudomonas Pxy after growth with either p-xylene or m-xylene oxidized the p- and m-isomers of tolualdehyde as well as p-methylbenzyl alcohol. The same cell extracts also catalyzed a "meta" fission of both 3- and 4-methylcatechol. Treatment of Pseudomonas Pxy with N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine led to the isolation of two mutant strains. Pseudomonas Pxy-40, when grown on succinate in the presence of p-xylene, accumulated p-toluic acid in the culture medium. Under the same conditions Pseudomonas Pxy-82 accumulated p-toluic acid and also 4-methylcatechol. When Pseudomonas Pxy-82 was grown on succinate in the presence of m-xylene, 3-methylcatechol and 3-methylsalicylic acid were excreted into the culture medium. A pathway is proposed for the initial reactions utilized by Pseudomonas Pxy to oxidize p- and m-xylene.
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Bacterial metabolism of para- and meta-xylene: oxidation of the aromatic ring.
- Author
-
Gibson DT, Mahadevan V, and Davey JF
- Subjects
- Anaerobiosis, Catechols biosynthesis, Cell-Free System, Chemical Phenomena, Chemistry, Chromatography, Thin Layer, Hydrocarbons biosynthesis, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Methylation, Mutation, Oxidation-Reduction, Phenols biosynthesis, Spectrophotometry, Succinates metabolism, Pseudomonas metabolism, Xylenes metabolism
- Abstract
Pseudomonas putida 39/D oxidized p-xylene to cis-3,6-dimethyl-3,5-cyclohexadiene-1,2-diol (cis-p-xylene dihydrodiol). The latter compound was isolated in crystalline form and its physical properties were determined. The cis configuration of the hydroxyl groups in the oxidation product was inferred from its ability to form an isopropylidene derivative with 2,2-dimethoxypropane. Acid treatment of cis-p-xylene dihydrodiol resulted in the formation of 2,5-dimethylphenol. A partially purified preparation of cis-toluene dihydrodiol dehydrogenase oxidized cis-p-xylene dihydrodiol to 1,2-dihydroxy-3,6-dimethylbenzene (3,6-dimethylpyrocatechol). P. putida 39/D oxidized m-xylene to a compound whose spectral and chromatographic characteristics were consistent with the structure 3,5-dimethyl-3,5-cyclohexadiene-1,2-diol. This product was very unstable, and all attempts to isolate it led to the formation of 2,4-dimethylphenol.
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Initial reactions in the oxidation of naphthalene by Pseudomonas putida.
- Author
-
Jeffrey AM, Yeh HJ, Jerina DM, Patel TR, Davey JF, and Gibson DT
- Subjects
- Culture Media, Deuterium, Kinetics, NAD, NADP, Oxidation-Reduction, Oxygen Consumption, Oxygenases metabolism, Stereoisomerism, Naphthalenes metabolism, Pseudomonas metabolism
- Abstract
A strain of Pseudomonas putida that can utilize naphthalene as its sole source of carbon and energy was isolated from soil. A mutant strain of this organism, P. putida 119, when grown on glucose in the presence of naphthalene, accumulates optically pure (+)-cis-1(R),2(S)-dihydroxy-1,2-dihydronaphthalene in the culture medium. The cis relative stereochemistry in this molecule was established by nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometry. Radiochemical trapping experiments established that this cis dihydrodiol is an intermediate in the metabolism of naphthalene by P. Fluorescens (formerly ATCC, 17483), P. putida (ATCC, 17484), and a Pseudomonas species (NCIB 9816), as well as the parent strain of P. putida described in this report. Formation of the cis dihydrodiol is catalyzed by a dioxygenase which requires either NADH or NADPH as an electron donor. A double label procedure is described for determining the origin of oxygen in the cis dihydrodiol under conditions where this metabolite would not normally accumulate. Several aromatic hydrocarbons are oxidized by cell extracts prepared from naphthalene-grown cells of P. putida. The cis dihydrodiol is converted to 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene by an NAD+-dependent dehydrogenase. This enzyme is specific for the (+) isomer of the dihydrodiol and shows a primary isotope effect when the dihydrodiol is substituted at C-2 with deuterium.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Dihydrodiols from anthracene and phenanthrene.
- Author
-
Jerina DM, Selander H, Yagi H, Wells MC, Davey JF, Mahadevan V, and Gibson DT
- Subjects
- Azotobacter metabolism, Pseudomonas metabolism, Anthracenes metabolism, Glycols biosynthesis, Phenanthrenes metabolism
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. A Critical Survey of Two Diagnostic Pregnancy Tests : (Colostrum Intracutaneous Test and Histidine Test).
- Author
-
Davey JF and Daley DE
- Published
- 1945
12. Exospores and cysts formed by methane-utilizing bacteria.
- Author
-
Whittenbury R, Davies SL, and Davey JF
- Subjects
- Bacteria metabolism, Hot Temperature, Microscopy, Electron, Spores cytology, Bacteria growth & development, Methane metabolism, Spores growth & development
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. S study of methods used in a reducing program for excessively overweight women.
- Author
-
MACINTOSH RG, DALEY DE, JACKSON DN, MORRISON MA, WINAKOR G, DAVEY JF, and McLAREN BA
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Obesity therapy, Overweight
- Published
- 1959
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The distribution in the methylobacteria of some key enzymes concerned with intermediary metabolism.
- Author
-
Davey JF, Whittenbury R, and Wilkinson JF
- Subjects
- Bacteria metabolism, Cell-Free System, Citric Acid Cycle, Flavoproteins, Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase metabolism, Ketoglutaric Acids, NAD, NADP, Oxidoreductases metabolism, Phosphogluconate Dehydrogenase metabolism, Bacteria enzymology, Methane metabolism
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Cytochromes of two methane-utilizing bacteria.
- Author
-
Davey JF and Mitton JR
- Subjects
- Carbon Monoxide, Cytochrome c Group analysis, Methane, Oxidation-Reduction, Spectrophotometry, Bacteria analysis, Cytochromes analysis
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.