All Stories

  1. The coffee leaf rust pandemic: An ever‐present danger to coffee production
  2. Understanding the mechanisms underlying biological control of Fusarium diseases in cereals
  3. Biocontrol Effect of Clonostachys rosea on Fusarium graminearum Infection and Mycotoxin Detoxification in Oat (Avena sativa)
  4. Alternative plant protection strategies for tomorrow's coffee
  5. Plant extracts as potential control agents of Black Sigatoka in banana
  6. Identification and Functional Characterisation of Two Oat UDP-Glucosyltransferases Involved in Deoxynivalenol Detoxification
  7. Biological control of plant diseases – What has been achieved and what is the direction?
  8. The Fungal Endophyte Penicillium olsonii ML37 Reduces Fusarium Head Blight by Local Induced Resistance in Wheat Spikes
  9. Regulation of Tomato Specialised Metabolism after Establishment of Symbiosis with the Endophytic Fungus Serendipita indica
  10. Transgenic approaches for plant disease control: Status and prospects 2021
  11. A Sesquiterpene Synthase from the Endophytic Fungus Serendipita indica Catalyzes Formation of Viridiflorol
  12. Succession of the fungal endophytic microbiome of wheat is dependent on tissue-specific interactions between host genotype and environment
  13. A 2-kb Mycovirus Converts a Pathogenic Fungus into a Beneficial Endophyte for Brassica Protection and Yield Enhancement
  14. Selection of fungal endophytes with biocontrol potential against Fusarium head blight in wheat
  15. Insights into the community structure and lifestyle of the fungal root endophytes of tomato by combining amplicon sequencing and isolation approaches with phytohormone profiling
  16. Editorial: Plant Disease Management in the Post-genomic Era: From Functional Genomics to Genome Editing
  17. Identification of two endophytic fungi that control Septoria tritici blotch in the field, using a structured screening approach
  18. Defining the twig fungal communities of Fraxinus species and Fraxinus excelsior genotypes with differences in susceptibility to ash dieback
  19. Fusarium Head Blight Modifies Fungal Endophytic Communities During Infection of Wheat Spikes
  20. Endophytic fungi as biocontrol agents: elucidating mechanisms in disease suppression
  21. Transgenic crops and beyond: how can biotechnology contribute to the sustainable control of plant diseases?
  22. Fungal communities associated with species of Fraxinus tolerant to ash dieback, and their potential for biological control
  23. A cerato-platanin protein SsCP1 targets plant PR1 and contributes to virulence of Sclerotinia sclerotiorum
  24. Plant Pathogen Resistance Biotechnology
  25. Large-Scale Phenomics Identifies Primary and Fine-Tuning Roles for CRKs in Responses Related to Oxidative Stress
  26. Activity-guided separation of Chromolaena odorata leaf extract reveals fractions with rice disease-reducing properties
  27. Insights on the Evolution of Mycoparasitism from the Genome of Clonostachys rosea
  28. Zearalenone detoxification by zearalenone hydrolase is important for the antagonistic ability of Clonostachys rosea against mycotoxigenic Fusarium graminearum
  29. The ash dieback crisis: genetic variation in resistance can prove a long-term solution
  30. Transcriptomic profiling to identify genes involved in Fusarium mycotoxin Deoxynivalenol and Zearalenone tolerance in the mycoparasitic fungus Clonostachys rosea
  31. Fitness costs and trade‐offs in plant disease
  32. The barley HvNAC6 transcription factor affects ABA accumulation and promotes basal resistance against powdery mildew
  33. Proteomic changes and endophytic micromycota during storage of organically and conventionally grown carrots
  34. Fusarium graminearum and Its Interactions with Cereal Heads: Studies in the Proteomics Era
  35. Interaction of barley powdery mildew effector candidate CSEP0055 with the defence protein PR17c
  36. The influence of the fungal pathogen Mycocentrospora acerina on the proteome and polyacetylenes and 6-methoxymellein in organic and conventionally cultivated carrots (Daucus carota) during post harvest storage
  37. Secretomics identifies Fusarium graminearum proteins involved in the interaction with barley and wheat
  38. Regulation of basal resistance by a powdery mildew‐induced cysteine‐rich receptor‐like protein kinase in barley
  39. Fusarium Head Blight of Cereals in Denmark: Species Complex and Related Mycotoxins
  40. Disease-Reducing Effect of Chromolaena odorata Extract on Sheath Blight and Other Rice Diseases
  41. Analysis of early events in the interaction between Fusarium graminearum and the susceptible barley (Hordeum vulgare) cultivar Scarlett
  42. Engineering Pathogen Resistance in Crop Plants: Current Trends and Future Prospects
  43. Investigation of the effect of nitrogen on severity of Fusarium Head Blight in barley
  44. Effects of  -1,3-glucan from Septoria tritici on structural defence responses in wheat
  45. Identification and characterization of barley RNA-directed RNA polymerases
  46. Cell wall appositions: the first line of defence
  47. Transcriptional regulation by an NAC (NAM–ATAF1,2–CUC2) transcription factor attenuates ABA signalling for efficient basal defence towards Blumeria graminis f. sp. hordei in Arabidopsis
  48. A cultivation independent, PCR-based protocol for the direct identification of plant pathogens in infected plant material
  49. Foreword
  50. How can we exploit functional genomics approaches for understanding the nature of plant defences? Barley as a case study
  51. Roles of reactive oxygen species in interactions between plants and pathogens
  52. What are the prospects for genetically engineered, disease resistant plants?
  53. Sustainable disease management in a European context
  54. The HvNAC6 transcription factor: a positive regulator of penetration resistance in barley and Arabidopsis
  55. Role of hydrogen peroxide during the interaction between the hemibiotrophic fungal pathogen Septoria tritici and wheat
  56. Defense-related genes expressed in Norway spruce roots after infection with the root rot pathogen Ceratobasidium bicorne (anamorph: Rhizoctonia sp.)
  57. Mechanisms involved in control of Blumeria graminis f.sp. hordei in barley treated with mycelial extracts from cultured fungi
  58. The molecular characterization of two barley proteins establishes the novel PR‐17 family of pathogenesis‐related proteins
  59. Control of Blumeria graminis f.sp. hordei by treatment with mycelial extracts from cultured fungi
  60. Proton extrusion is an essential signalling component in the HR of epidermal single cells in the barley-powdery mildew interaction
  61. Mechanical transmission of maize rayado fino marafivirus (MRFV) to maize and barley by means of the vascular puncture technique
  62. 14-3-3 proteins - eukaryotic regulatory proteins with many functions
  63. Molecular Characterization of the Oxalate Oxidase Involved in the Response of Barley to the Powdery Mildew Fungus1
  64. 14-3-3 proteins - eukaryotic regulatory proteins with many functions
  65. PCR cloning, DNA sequencing and phylogenetic analysis of a xylanase gene from the phytopathogenic fungus Lib.
  66. The 14-3-3 protein interacts directly with the C-terminal region of the plant plasma membrane H(+)-ATPase.
  67. Differential gene transcript accumulation in barley leaf epidermis and mesophyll in response to attack byBlumeria graminisf.sp.hordei(syn.Erysiphe graminisf.sp.hordei)
  68. Subcellular localization of H2O2 in plants. H2O2 accumulation in papillae and hypersensitive response during the barley-powdery mildew interaction
  69. Expression of a defence-related intercellular barley peroxidase in transgenic tobacco
  70. Ethanol increases sensitivity of oxalate oxidase assays and facilitates direct activity staining in SDS gels
  71. Dimerization Characteristics of the 94-kDa Glucose-Regulated Protein
  72. Characterization of the transcript of a new class of retroposon-type repetitive element cloned from the powdery mildew fungus,
  73. Germin-like oxalate oxidase, a H2O2-producing enzyme, accumulates in barley attacked by the powdery mildew fungus
  74. 1995 and Beyond
  75. A putative O-methyltransferase from barley is induced by fungal pathogens and UV light
  76. Accumulation of a putative guanidine compound in relation to other early defence reactions in epidermal cells of barley and wheat exhibiting resistance to Erysiphe graminis f.sp. hordei
  77. Induced resistance in sugar beet against Cercospora beticola: induction by dichloroisonicotinic acid is independent of chitinase and β-1,3-glucanase transcript accumulation
  78. Purification, Characterization, and Molecular Cloning of Basic PR-1-Type Pathogenesis-Related Proteins from Barley
  79. A pathogen-induced gene of barley encodes a HSP90 homologue showing striking similarity to vertebrate forms resident in the endoplasmic reticulum
  80. Accumulation of defence-related transcripts and cloning of a chitinase mRNA from pea leaves (Pisum sativum L.) inoculated with Ascochyta pisi Lib.
  81. Plant chitinases
  82. 14-3-3 proteins: a highly conserved, widespread family of eukaryotic proteins
  83. Cloning and characterization of a pathogen-induced chitinase in Brassica napus
  84. A pathogen‐induced gene of barley encodes a protein showing high similarity to a protein kinase regulator
  85. cDNA cloning and characterization of two barley peroxidase transcripts induced differentially by the powdery mildew fungus Erysiphe graminis
  86. Induction, purification and characterization of chitinase isolated from pea leaves inoculated with Ascochyta pisi
  87. Early induction of new mRNAs accompanies the resistance reaction of barley to the wheat pathogen, Erysiphe graminis f.sp. tritici
  88. Gene expression in Brassica campestris showing a hypersensitive response to the incompatible pathogen Xanthomonas campestris pv. vitians
  89. Plant gene expression in response to pathogens
  90. Evidence that linamarin and lotaustralin, the two cyanogenic glucosides of Trifolium repens L., are synthesized by a single set of microsomal enzymes controlled by the Ac/ac locus
  91. The inheritance of cyanoglucoside content in Trifolium repens L.
  92. In vitro characterization of the Ac locus in white clover (Trifolium repens L.)
  93. Developmental and Physiological Studies on the Cyanogenic Glucosides of White Clover,Trifolium repensL.