The Journal of Visualized Experiments (JoVE) is a peer reviewed, PubMed-indexed video journal. Our mission is to increase the productivity of scientific research.

Recommend to Librarian

In JoVE (1)

Other Publications (1)

Automatic Translation

This translation into Russian was automatically generated.
English Version | Other Languages

Articles by Tom Isakeit in JoVE

 JoVE Immunology and Infection

Количественная грибковой колонизации, спорогенеза, и производство микотоксинов Использование ядра Биопробы


JoVE 3727 4/23/2012

Plant Pathology and Microbiology, Texas A&M University

Опустошение зерновых культур на семенные заражения грибками вызвало многочисленные исследовательские усилия, чтобы лучше понять растение-патоген взаимодействия. Для изучения семенного грибковых взаимодействия в лабораторных условиях, мы разработали надежный метод для количественного грибковых воспроизводства биомассы и микотоксинами с ядром биопробы.

Other articles by Tom Isakeit on PubMed

Inactivation of the Lipoxygenase ZmLOX3 Increases Susceptibility of Maize to Aspergillus Spp

Plant and fungal lipoxygenases (LOX) catalyze the oxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids, creating fatty-acid hydroperoxides (oxylipins). Fungal oxylipins are required for normal fungal development and secondary metabolism, and plant host-derived oxylipins interfere with these processes in fungi, presumably by signal mimicry. The maize LOX gene ZmLOX3 has been implicated previously in seed-Aspergillus interactions, so we tested the interactions of a mutant maize line (lox3-4, in which ZmLOX3 is disrupted) with the mycotoxigenic seed-infecting fungi Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus nidulans. The lox3-4 mutant was more susceptible than wild-type maize to both Aspergillus species. All strains of A. flavus and A. nidulans produced more conidia and aflatoxin (or the precursor sterigmatocystin) on lox3-4 kernels than on wild-type kernels, in vitro and under field conditions. Although oxylipins did not differ detectably between A. flavus-infected kernels of the lox3-4 and wild-type (WT) maize, oxylipin precursors (free fatty acids) and a downstream metabolite (jasmonic acid) accumulated to greater levels in lox3-4 than in WT kernels. The increased resistance of the lox3-4 mutant to other fungal pathogens (Fusarium, Colletotrichum, Cochliobolus, and Exserohilum spp.) is in sharp contrast to results described herein for Aspergillus spp., suggesting that outcomes of LOX-governed host-pathogen interactions are pathogen-specific.

Waiting
simple hit counter