Search

Your search keyword '"Tobamovirus pathogenicity"' showing total 77 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Descriptor "Tobamovirus pathogenicity" Remove constraint Descriptor: "Tobamovirus pathogenicity"
77 results on '"Tobamovirus pathogenicity"'

Search Results

1. An Agent-Based Model Shows How Mixed Infections Drive Multiyear Pathotype Dynamics in a Plant-Virus System.

2. Ability of Non-Hosts and Cucurbitaceous Weeds to Transmit Cucumber Green Mottle Mosaic Virus.

3. Autoxidation Products of the Methanolic Extract of the Leaves of Combretum micranthum Exert Antiviral Activity against Tomato Brown Rugose Fruit Virus (ToBRFV).

4. Investigations on annual spreading of viruses infecting cucurbit crops in Uttar Pradesh State, India.

5. Ameliorating the Adverse Effects of Tomato mosaic tobamovirus Infecting Tomato Plants in Egypt by Boosting Immunity in Tomato Plants Using Zinc Oxide Nanoparticles.

6. RdDM pathway components differentially modulate Tobamovirus symptom development.

7. A step towards Balkan Capsicum annuum L. core collection: Phenotypic and biochemical characterization of 180 accessions for agronomic, fruit quality, and virus resistance traits.

8. Tomato Brown Rugose Fruit Virus Contributes to Enhanced Pepino Mosaic Virus Titers in Tomato Plants.

9. Single amino acid substitutions in the coat protein and RNA-dependent RNA polymerase alleviated the virulence of Cucumber green mottle mosaic virus and conferred cross protection against severe infection.

10. Genome-wide analysis of small RNAs from Odontoglossum ringspot virus and Cymbidium mosaic virus synergistically infecting Phalaenopsis.

11. A Single Amino Acid Substitution in the Intervening Region of 129K Protein of Cucumber Green Mottle Mosaic Virus Resulted in Attenuated Symptoms.

12. Dual resistance of transgenic plants against Cymbidium mosaic virus and Odontoglossum ringspot virus.

13. Arbuscular Mycorrhizal Fungi Trigger Transcriptional Expression of Flavonoid and Chlorogenic Acid Biosynthetic Pathways Genes in Tomato against Tomato Mosaic Virus.

14. Insights into the maternal pathway for Cucumber green mottle mosaic virus infection of cucurbit seeds.

15. A single nucleotide change in the overlapping MP and CP reading frames results in differences in symptoms caused by two isolates of Youcai mosaic virus.

16. Assessment of the Efficacy and Mode of Action of Benzo(1,2,3)-Thiadiazole-7-Carbothioic Acid S-Methyl Ester (BTH) and Its Derivatives in Plant Protection Against Viral Disease.

17. Transcriptome Analysis of Watermelon Leaves Reveals Candidate Genes Responsive to Cucumber green mottle mosaic virus Infection.

18. The bumblebee Bombus terrestris carries a primary inoculum of Tomato brown rugose fruit virus contributing to disease spread in tomatoes.

19. Resistance to CymMV and ORSV in artificial microRNA transgenic Nicotiana benthamiana plants.

20. The 96th Amino Acid of the Coat Protein of Cucumber Green Mottle Mosaic Virus Affects Virus Infectivity.

21. Cucumber green mottle mosaic virus: Rapidly Increasing Global Distribution, Etiology, Epidemiology, and Management.

22. New Korean isolates of Pepper mild mottle virus (PMMoV) differ in symptom severity and subcellular localization of the 126 kDa protein.

23. A New Israeli Tobamovirus Isolate Infects Tomato Plants Harboring Tm-22 Resistance Genes.

24. Local and systemic hormonal responses in pepper leaves during compatible and incompatible pepper-tobamovirus interactions.

25. Differential responses to virus challenge of laboratory and wild accessions of australian species of nicotiana, and comparative analysis of RDR1 gene sequences.

26. Turnip vein clearing virus movement protein nuclear activity: Do Tobamovirus movement proteins play a role in immune response suppression?

27. Functional characterization of the mutations in Pepper mild mottle virus overcoming tomato tm-1-mediated resistance.

28. Tomato genome-wide transcriptional responses to Fusarium wilt and Tomato Mosaic Virus.

29. A cellular gene as a double surveillance agent for plant to combat pathogen.

30. Induction of resistance in tomato plants against tomato mosaic tobamovirus using beneficial microbial isolates.

31. Host membrane proteins involved in the replication of tobamovirus RNA.

32. Analysis of the antioxidant response of Nicotiana benthamiana to infection with two strains of Pepper mild mottle virus.

33. Brief report: genome sequence and construction of an infectious cDNA clone of Ribgrass mosaic virus from Chinese cabbage in Korea.

34. The chaperonin CCT8 facilitates spread of tobamovirus infection.

35. A single amino acid substitution in the 126-kDa protein of pepper mild mottle virus controls replication and systemic movement into upper non-inoculated leaves of bell pepper plants.

36. The nonstructural protein pC6 of rice grassy stunt virus trans-complements the cell-to-cell spread of a movement-defective tomato mosaic virus.

37. Rapid genetic diversification and high fitness penalties associated with pathogenicity evolution in a plant virus.

38. Virus infection suppresses Nicotiana benthamiana adaptive phenotypic plasticity.

39. Gaining replicability in a nonhost compromises the silencing suppression activity of Tobacco mild green mosaic virus in a host.

40. Genetic basis for the hierarchical interaction between Tobamovirus spp. and L resistance gene alleles from different pepper species.

41. The 126- and/or 183-kDa replicases or their coding regions are responsible both for inefficient local and for systemic movements of Paprika mild mottle virus Japanese strain in tomato plants.

42. [Mechanisms underlying the host range restriction of tobamoviruses].

43. Microtubule-associated protein AtMPB2C plays a role in organization of cortical microtubules, stomata patterning, and tobamovirus infectivity.

44. A single residue in the 126-kDa protein of pepper mild mottle virus controls the severity of symptoms on infected green bell pepper plants.

45. The coat protein gene of tobamovirus P 0 pathotype is a determinant for activation of temperature-insensitive L 1a-gene-mediated resistance in Capsicum plants.

46. Cooperative effect of two amino acid mutations in the coat protein of Pepper mild mottle virus overcomes L3-mediated resistance in Capsicum plants.

47. [Molecular identification of cymbidium mosaic Potexvirus and Odontoglossum ringspot Tobamovirus complex infected Phalaenopsis and its pathological ultrastructural alteration].

48. Synergistic pathogenicity of a phloem-limited begomovirus and tobamoviruses, despite negative interference.

49. Changes in photosynthetic metabolism induced by tobamovirus infection in Nicotiana benthamiana studied in vivo by thermoluminescence.

50. An internal ribosome entry site located upstream of the crucifer-infecting tobamovirus coat protein (CP) gene can be used for CP synthesis in vivo.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources