2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1364-3703.2009.00565.x
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Assessing the impact of transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics on fungal phytopathology

Abstract: SUMMARYPeer-reviewed literature is today littered with exciting new tools and techniques that are being used in all areas of biology and medicine. Transcriptomics, proteomics and, more recently, metabolomics are three of these techniques that have impacted on fungal plant pathology. Used individually, each of these techniques can generate a plethora of data that could occupy a laboratory for years. When used in combination, they have the potential to comprehensively dissect a system at the transcriptional and … Show more

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Cited by 130 publications
(84 citation statements)
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References 104 publications
(186 reference statements)
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“…Rossouw et al [115] measured the timecourse gene expression levels and volatile aroma compound concentrations during the fermentation processes of five industrial wine yeast strands. Reviews on systems biology studies of fungal phytopathology [116], Aspergilli [117], and micro-organisms in general [118] can also be found. Moreover, applications of high-throughput assays to the constitutive micro-organisms in an ecosystem (metagenomics, meta-transcriptomics, meta-metabolomics) are in the incipient yet accelerating stage [119].…”
Section: Integrated Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rossouw et al [115] measured the timecourse gene expression levels and volatile aroma compound concentrations during the fermentation processes of five industrial wine yeast strands. Reviews on systems biology studies of fungal phytopathology [116], Aspergilli [117], and micro-organisms in general [118] can also be found. Moreover, applications of high-throughput assays to the constitutive micro-organisms in an ecosystem (metagenomics, meta-transcriptomics, meta-metabolomics) are in the incipient yet accelerating stage [119].…”
Section: Integrated Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We compared RNA-seq expression profiles of both fungi grown on artificial media enriched with host-derived carbon sources (poplar leaf extract or poplar wood chips). Inoculation of host-derived media has been widely used to efficiently mimic conditions occurring during host infection and colonization by fungal pathogens (18). Even if artificial media does not completely mimic the structure and dynamics of the nutritional environment that exists in planta (18,19), we expect that our simplified model of growth on poplar-enriched artificial media can provide a convenient way to compare factors involved in leaf and woody tissue invasion, breakdown, and assimilation.…”
Section: Gene Content and Expression In M Populorum And M Populicolamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, in many cases, all we know of newly discovered species is the sequence of a small part of their genome, with no insights regarding morphology, physiology or ecology of the specimen. In the future, a combination of techniques such as transcriptomics (Bhadauria et al, 2007), proteomics (Doyle 2011), metabolomics (Tan et al, 2009) may allow us to evaluate physiological and ecological inferences based on DNA sequences. Classical culture techniques, however, will remain important for studying morphology, preserving voucher specimens, and generally expanding our knowledge of undescribed species associated with novel sequences.…”
Section: Assessing Fungal Biodiversity and Functionality In Aquatic Ementioning
confidence: 99%