2001
DOI: 10.1046/j.1464-6722.2001.00085.x
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Genes expressed during early stages of rice infection with the rice blast fungusMagnaporthe grisea

Abstract: summary A system-wide approach was adopted to further elucidate mechanisms regulating disease outcome between rice and the fungal pathogen Magnaporthe grisea. First, a cDNA library was constructed from M. grisea infected rice at 48 h post-inoculation. The 5' end-sequencing of 619 randomly selected clones revealed 359 expressed sequence tags (ESTs) that had not previously been described. A total of 124 from 260 ESTs with high and moderate similarity scores, based on BlastX, were organized into categories accord… Show more

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Cited by 84 publications
(66 citation statements)
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“…SwissProt, GenBank, and Pfam databases were searched at either Syngenta Biotechnology, Inc, Research Triangle Park, NC, U.S.A.; Syngenta Jealots Hill International Research Centre, Bracknell, Berkshire, UK; or the University of CaliforniaRiverside, U.S.A. The FHI database was complied from 4,838 ESTs from wheat spikes infected with F. graminarium (BM134271-138704, BM140307-140614, and BM259010-259098) (Kruger et al 2002), 4,908 ESTs from germinating conidia of Blumeria graminis and barley infected with that species (Thomas et al 2001); 1,168 ESTs from rice infected with M. grisea (AW154962-155632 and AW069892-070183) (Kim et al 2001;Rauyaree et al 2001), 1,148 ESTs from pine infected with Heterobasidium annosum (BM346837-347258) (Karlsson et al 2003), and 1,156 ESTs from wheat infected with Mycosphaerella graminicola (AW067761-067765 and AW179955-181107). The FP database of validated genes involved in fungus-plant pathogen interaction was compiled from the literature (Idnurm and Howlett 2001).…”
Section: Database Searchesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…SwissProt, GenBank, and Pfam databases were searched at either Syngenta Biotechnology, Inc, Research Triangle Park, NC, U.S.A.; Syngenta Jealots Hill International Research Centre, Bracknell, Berkshire, UK; or the University of CaliforniaRiverside, U.S.A. The FHI database was complied from 4,838 ESTs from wheat spikes infected with F. graminarium (BM134271-138704, BM140307-140614, and BM259010-259098) (Kruger et al 2002), 4,908 ESTs from germinating conidia of Blumeria graminis and barley infected with that species (Thomas et al 2001); 1,168 ESTs from rice infected with M. grisea (AW154962-155632 and AW069892-070183) (Kim et al 2001;Rauyaree et al 2001), 1,148 ESTs from pine infected with Heterobasidium annosum (BM346837-347258) (Karlsson et al 2003), and 1,156 ESTs from wheat infected with Mycosphaerella graminicola (AW067761-067765 and AW179955-181107). The FP database of validated genes involved in fungus-plant pathogen interaction was compiled from the literature (Idnurm and Howlett 2001).…”
Section: Database Searchesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Microarray analyses have compared gene expression in germlings growing on inductive surfaces (promoting appressorium formation) and noninductive surfaces (Oh et al, 2008) and gene expression in mycelium growing in nitrogen-rich and nitrogen-deficient media (Donofrio et al, 2006). In planta expression analyses performed following development of macroscopic symptoms identified both fungal and rice genes expressed in planta (Kim et al, 2001;Rauyaree et al, 2001;Matsumura et al, 2003). However, infected tissue with visible symptoms probably included filamentous necrotrophic hyphae in addition to IH (Berruyer et al, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…during appressoria formation in Ma. grisea (Rauyaree et al, 2004). Several such genes, including cyclophilins, peptidylprolyl cis-trans isomerases, metallothionein and thioredoxins, appear to be differentially expressed in the knobs of M. haptotylum (Tables 4 and 6).…”
Section: Comparison Of Gene Expression In Knobs and Appressoriamentioning
confidence: 99%