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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: The impetus for the development of this Field Guide came about as a result of pleas from the community around the village of Doldol, Laikipia County, to initiate a control programme for Australian prickly pear [Opuntia stricta (Haw.) Haw.; Fabaceae], an invasive plant which was having a dramatic impact on livelihoods. However, a number of other exotic plants, which were less widespread, but had the potential of becoming invasive, were not seen as a potential problem. In order to avoid a similar situation from arising in the future, the community expressed a need for a Field Guide, which would include descriptions of naturalized and invasive species already present in, and those that were most likely to invade Laikipia County and, information on how best to manage them. An additional impetus was to contribute to the four main objectives of the National Strategy and Action Plan for the Management of Invasive Species in Kenya's Protected Areas. The Field Guide contributes in some or other way to all of these objectives which are to (i) Enhance awareness of invasive species to relevant actors; (ii) Prevent new invasions, manage established invasions and rehabilitate degraded habitats; (iii) Enhance research, monitoring and information management on invasive species; and (iv) Enhance capacity, resource mobilization and coordination. Extensive surveys revealed the presence of a number of introduced plant species which had escaped cultivation and established populations in the 'wild' to the detriment of natural resources and the people that depend on them. Introduced succulents, especially those in the genus Opuntia (Cactaceae), were found to be the most widespread and abundant invasive species in the semi-arid regions in the north and east of Laikipia County. Other succulents, those in the genus Bryophyllum (Crassulaceae), were also found to have escaped cultivation and were locally abundant. In the higher rainfall areas to the west and southwest, introduced trees such as black wattle (Acacia mearnsii De Wild.; Fabaceae) and Australian blackwood (Acacia melanoxylon R. Br.; Fabaceae) and the shrubs/climbers, Mauritius thorn [Caesalpinia decapetala (Roth) Alston; Fabaceae] and yellow cestrum (Cestrum aurantiacum Lindl.; Solanaceae), were invasive. Introduced plants, which have the potential to become problematic in Laikipia, unless eradicated or controlled, have also been included in the Guide. This includes species such as famine weed (Parthenium hysterophorus L.; Asteraceae) and 'mathenge' [Prosopis juliflora (Sw.) DC.; Fabaceae], which are already abundant in areas adjoining the County.
    Description: Published
    Keywords: QK1-989 ; S1-972 ; invasives ; nonindigenous species ; Solanales ; Prosopis ; eudicots ; Caesalpinia decapetala ; Fabales ; Parthenium hysterophorus ; Asterales ; Opuntia stricta ; exotic species ; ACP Countries ; weeds ; Solanaceae ; invasive organisms ; eukaryotes ; nonindigenous organisms ; Commonwealth of Nations ; Africa ; Mimosoideae ; Acacia mearnsii ; non-native species ; invasions ; invasive alien species ; Caryophyllales ; late black wattle ; Developing Countries ; Opuntia ; East Africa ; non-indigenous species ; non-native organisms ; common prickly pear ; weed control ; Caesalpinia ; blackwood ; plants ; Parthenium ; Acacia melanoxylon ; Bryophyllum ; introduced organisms ; Cestrum ; Cactaceae ; Prosopis juliflora ; Kenya ; invasive species ; Fabaceae ; Africa South of Sahara ; Caesalpinioideae ; angiosperms ; exotic organisms ; Cestrum aurantiacum ; Acacia ; Asteraceae ; subsaharan Africa ; Spermatophyta ; Anglophone Africa ; alien invasive species ; introduced species ; non-indigenous organisms ; thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences::PST Botany and plant sciences ; thema EDItEUR::1 Place qualifiers::1H Africa::1HF Sub-Saharan Africa::1HFG East Africa::1HFGK Kenya
    Language: English
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  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-09-11
    Description: 10th Anniversary of Plants—Recent Advances and Perspectives is a scientific paper collection specially published on the anniversary of Plants. Covering all major areas of plant science, it is a valuable guide through current achievements and future discoveries in this scientific field.
    Keywords: Secale cereale ; Secale montanum ; Secale strictum ; QTL mapping ; molecular marker ; self-incompatibility ; fertility ; seed set ; abiotic stress ; cell homeostasis ; heterologous host synthetic approach ; terpenophenolics ; brown spot ; ACT ; fungus culture filtrate ; mycotoxin ; fruit development ; fruit gauge ; VPD ; Mangifera indica ; cell division ; cell expansion ; ripening ; pulegone ; isomenthone ; menthone ; thymol ; p-cymene ; chemotypes ; seasonal variation ; enantiomeric distribution ; label-free proteomics ; Panax ginseng ; ginsenosides ; cytochrome p450 ; UDP-glycosyltransferase ; MEP pathway ; MVA pathway ; TCA/acetone ; methanol/chloroform ; endophytes ; foliar pathogens ; pathogenicity ; taxonomy ; Thymus vulgaris ; Crithmum maritimum ; leather artifacts ; essential oils ; anti-bacterial activity ; Euphorbia dendroides L. ; aerial parts ; polyphenols ; antioxidant activity ; anti-inflammatory activity ; toxicity ; calcium oxalate crystals ; colleter ; extrafloral nectaries ; resin gland ; bud protection ; plant-environment interaction ; carbohydrate metabolism ; microarray ; crop ; rice ; productivity ; endosperm ; geometry ; morphology ; seed shape ; Vitaceae ; exDNA ; environmental DNA ; DNA sensing ; self-DNA inhibition ; autotoxicity ; plant response ; DAMP ; PAMP ; EDAP ; climate change ; food security ; Mediterranean countries ; sustainable exploitation ; phytogenetic resources ; candidate gene ; quantitative trait locus ; recombinant inbred line ; soybean drought tolerance ; weighted drought coefficient ; antioxidants ; biostimulants ; biotic stress ; GABA ; metabolism ; phytohormones ; reactive oxygen species ; signaling ; tricarboxylic acid cycle ; bacterial functions ; co-presence networks ; metagenomics ; microbial ecology ; plant domestication ; trace element ; plant nutrient ; salinity ; antioxidant defense system ; glyoxalase system ; biochar ; licorice ; soil enzymes ; nutrients ; root system ; ALS ; BCAA ; low oxygen ; flooding ; AIP1 ; Eucommia ulmoides Oliver ; trait variations ; probability grading ; quantitative traits ; planting models ; leaves ; cytokinin ; TD-K ; thidiazuron ; INCYDE ; CPPU ; isopentenyl transferase ; IPT ; cytokinin oxidase/dehydrogenase ; CKX ; wheat ; barley ; yield ; cucumber ; QTL-seq ; SNP markers ; white immature fruit skin color ; ecological costs ; germination models ; herbicide resistance ; hydrotime ; target-site resistance ; hydrogen peroxide ; sodium hypochlorite ; generalized regression neural network ; genetic algorithm ; scarification ; seed dormancy ; plant tissue culture ; foliar descriptors ; leaf area ; models ; vine leaves ; Olea europaea L. ; olive ; genotype by sequencing (GBS) ; single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) ; whole-genome sequencing (WGS) ; reference genome ; plastid markers ; DNA barcoding ; ISSR markers ; Egyptian barley ; agro-morphological traits ; cluster analysis ; genetic variation ; biplot ; drought stress ; drying processes ; mathematical model ; plant hydric stress tolerance ; rate of weight loss ; RWLMod ; water evaporation ; photosynthesis ; elevated CO2 ; Rubisco ; electron transport ; light ; diurnal cycle ; sexual propagation ; cold stratification ; in situ ; ex situ ; plant endemism ; Morocco ; biodiversity ; ex-situ conservation ; protocols ; germplasm ; forest berries ; brushing ; lettuce ; chicory ; phytochemicals ; antioxidant capacity ; Ziziphus lotus ; phenolics ; SH-SY5Y cell line ; chromatography ; Koelreuteria paniculata ; dry ethanol extracts ; GC-MS analysis ; chemical compounds ; antitumor and antimicrobial activities ; medicinal plant ; bioactive compounds ; plant-derived secondary metabolites (PDSM) ; cell suspension culture (CSC) ; bioreactor engineering ; apple ; Golden Delicious ; Top Red ; fruitlet thinners ; light reactions ; electron transport rate ; photoprotective mechanism ; state transitions ; PSII repair cycle ; vegetation structure ; environmental variables ; PC-ORD ; plant community assembly ; Himalaya ; allopolyploidy ; interspecific hybridization ; unreduced gametes ; cytological diploidization ; genomic changes ; root length ; root/shoot ratio ; specific root length ; Saragolle Lucana ; seed coating ; heavy metals ; evolution ; hyperaccumulation ; black chokeberry (Aronia melanocarpa) ; anthocyanin stability ; herbs ; co-pigmentation ; color stability ; functional foods/beverages ; biotechnological tools ; ethnomedicine ; in vitro culture ; genetic improvement ; pollen ; tip growth ; calcium ; calcium dependent protein kinase ; Rho Guanine Dissociation Inhibitor ; ROP GTPase ; RhoGDI displacement factor ; polarity ; guar ; gene expression ; qRT-PCR ; RNA-Seq ; salt stress ; salt tolerance ; stress ; transcriptome ; D-tagatose ; IFP48 ; induced resistance ; sweet immunity ; sugar-enhanced defense ; Plasmopara viticola ; Botrytis cinerea ; Vitis vinifera ; human diet ; edible wild plants ; Plantago coronopus L. ; Rumex acetosa L. ; Cichorium intybus L. ; Artemisia dracunculus L. ; phytochemistry ; anti-inflammatory properties ; stem photosynthesis ; hydraulic recovery ; soaking ; X-ray micro-CT ; bark water uptake ; embolism ; genetic resources ; Solanaceae ; Cucumis ; Lactuca ; diversity ; vegetables ; genebank ; essential oil ; iNOS ; interleukin ; lavenders ; NF-κB ; glycosyltransferases ; ER-Golgi trafficking ; mechanism of protein sorting ; COPI and COPII complexes ; sequences and motifs involved in trafficking ; Arabidopsis ; gene regulation ; protein-protein interaction ; transcription factor ; WRI1 ; TCP20 ; lipases ; lipid metabolism ; plant-environment interactions ; reproductive development ; vegetative development ; Urtica dioica ; soilless systems ; cultivated nettle ; stress factors ; functional properties ; preharvest sprouting ; MKK3 ; maternal and paternal expressed genes ; imprinted genes ; polycomb repressive complex 2 ; mRNA processing bodies ; ribonucleic binding proteins ; monosomes ; ethylene ; elicitors ; fruit ripening ; ACC synthase/oxidase ; GC-MS ; polyamines ; Vigna genus ; introgression ; hybridisation ; phylogeny ; de novo domestication ; feralisation ; novel ecosystems ; complex networks ; tree communities ; Lantana camara ; Prosopis juliflora ; ascorbic acid ; genetic diversity ; molecular markers ; aquaculture pond sediment ; recovery ; Triticum aestivum ; chlorophyll fluorescence ; wheat grass juice quality ; UV-B radiation ; olive tree ; metabolomic ; phenolic profile ; lipophilic profile ; ecophysiology ; environment ; arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis ; comparative transcriptomics ; Arum-type ; Paris-type ; Solanum lycopersicum ; Rhizophagus irregularis ; Gigaspora margarita ; Camelina sativa ; semi-arid lands ; biofuel feedstock ; biodiesel ; renewable diesel ; crop breeding ; transgenesis ; genome editing ; Xanthomonas euvesicatoria ; host associate factor ; comparative genomics ; Cannabis sativa L. ; chemovars ; secondary metabolites ; trichomes ; residual by-products ; biogeography ; cardioid ; islands ; geometric models ; Mediterranean flora ; Silene ; super-ellipse ; abscisic acid ; aromatic herb ; ascorbate-glutathione cycle ; jasmonic acid ; lipoic acid ; oxidative stress ; salicylic acid ; Salvia officinalis ; drought ; state of stress ; tolerance ; avoidance ; stress survival ; amino acids ; nitrate reductase ; glutamine synthetase ; plants mycorrhized ; dark septate ; Daphne genkwa ; Thymelaeaceae ; flavonoids ; design of experiments ; blooming stages ; germination stimulant ; witchweed ; methyl phenlactonoates (MPs) ; Nijmegen-1 ; weed ; plant development ; vasculature ; leaf traces ; structure ; microtomography ; Euphorbiaceae ; in vitro crop ; gamma radiation ; ionizing radiation ; mutants ; Fumaria scheleicheri Soy. Will. ; isoquinoline alkaloids ; HPLC-DAD ; in vitro anti-cholinesterase ; cytotoxic ; antioxidant ; ABC model ; hop ; transcription factors ; type-II MADS box ; type-I MADS-box ; AFLP ; carpological traits ; genetic structure ; molecular systematics ; plastid phylogeny ; Valerianaceae ; auxins ; embryogenic calli ; HPLC ; IAA ; immunohistochemistry ; deficit irrigation ; grape quality ; phenology ; plant diseases ; bacterium ; symptoms ; molecular classification ; common juniper ; common larch ; Cupressaceae ; Pinaceae ; SPME-GC-MS ; volatile compounds ; herbicidal activity ; weed control ; trait association ; GCV ; genetic variability ; genetic advance ; heritability ; PCV ; Cicer arietinum L. ; gold nanoparticles ; carbon nanotubes ; ATR-FTIR spectroscopy ; machine learning techniques ; principal component analysis ; support vector machine classification ; citrus ; melanose ; Diaporthe citri ; epidemiology ; symptomatology ; Pseudomonas cannabina pv. alisalensis ; resistance-nodulation-cell division transporter ; type-three secretion system ; phytoalexin ; brassinin ; glucosinolate ; cabbage ; flowering ; juvenile traits ; genetic stability ; flow cytometry ; somaclonal variation ; thorniness ; carbohydrates ; protein ; lipids ; fatty acids ; minerals ; plastome ; Plicosepalus acaciae ; Plicosepalus curviflorus ; loranthaceae ; mistletoe ; phylogenetic relationship ; plastome structure ; comparative analysis ; magnetic resonance imaging ; Solanum tuberosum ; multi-exponential transverse relaxation ; water stress ; broccoli ; human nutrition ; improved health ; melatonin ; postharvest ; apricot ; pollen tube ; pollination ; Prunus armeniaca ; S-alleles ; Populus ; hexokinase ; sucrose metabolism ; sugar signaling ; stress and defense ; centres of origin ; crop wild relatives ; crop domestication ; cryopreservation ; conservation ; in vitro storage ; ecosystem restoration ; plant breeding ; acidification ; alkalinisation ; bud burst ; freezing ; Malus domestica ; pH ; Picea abies ; Pinus cembra ; histone modification ; Taraxacum kok-saghyz ; natural rubber ; high light stress ; singlet oxygen ; signalling ; GPX5 ; beta cyclocitral ; acrolein ; glutathione peroxidase ; carbonyl ; transcription ; SLIM1 transcription factor ; sulfur deficiency ; Arabidopsis thaliana ; sulfate transporter ; sulfate assimilation ; stress tolerance ; LRR-RLK receptors ; dodders ; parasitic plants ; proteomics ; virus vertical transmission ; CMV-Fny strain ; pseudorecombinant virus ; chimeric virus ; infection rate ; seed-growth tests ; electron microscopy ; circular dichroism spectroscopy ; viral assembly ; Adiantetea capilli-veneris ; demographic analysis ; ecology ; IUCN ; plant conservation ; phytosociology ; rupicolous habitat ; n/a ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences
    Language: English
    Format: application/octet-stream
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-09-11
    Description: 10th Anniversary of Plants—Recent Advances and Perspectives is a scientific paper collection specially published on the anniversary of Plants. Covering all major areas of plant science, it is a valuable guide through current achievements and future discoveries in this scientific field.
    Keywords: Secale cereale ; Secale montanum ; Secale strictum ; QTL mapping ; molecular marker ; self-incompatibility ; fertility ; seed set ; abiotic stress ; cell homeostasis ; heterologous host synthetic approach ; terpenophenolics ; brown spot ; ACT ; fungus culture filtrate ; mycotoxin ; fruit development ; fruit gauge ; VPD ; Mangifera indica ; cell division ; cell expansion ; ripening ; pulegone ; isomenthone ; menthone ; thymol ; p-cymene ; chemotypes ; seasonal variation ; enantiomeric distribution ; label-free proteomics ; Panax ginseng ; ginsenosides ; cytochrome p450 ; UDP-glycosyltransferase ; MEP pathway ; MVA pathway ; TCA/acetone ; methanol/chloroform ; endophytes ; foliar pathogens ; pathogenicity ; taxonomy ; Thymus vulgaris ; Crithmum maritimum ; leather artifacts ; essential oils ; anti-bacterial activity ; Euphorbia dendroides L. ; aerial parts ; polyphenols ; antioxidant activity ; anti-inflammatory activity ; toxicity ; calcium oxalate crystals ; colleter ; extrafloral nectaries ; resin gland ; bud protection ; plant-environment interaction ; carbohydrate metabolism ; microarray ; crop ; rice ; productivity ; endosperm ; geometry ; morphology ; seed shape ; Vitaceae ; exDNA ; environmental DNA ; DNA sensing ; self-DNA inhibition ; autotoxicity ; plant response ; DAMP ; PAMP ; EDAP ; climate change ; food security ; Mediterranean countries ; sustainable exploitation ; phytogenetic resources ; candidate gene ; quantitative trait locus ; recombinant inbred line ; soybean drought tolerance ; weighted drought coefficient ; antioxidants ; biostimulants ; biotic stress ; GABA ; metabolism ; phytohormones ; reactive oxygen species ; signaling ; tricarboxylic acid cycle ; bacterial functions ; co-presence networks ; metagenomics ; microbial ecology ; plant domestication ; trace element ; plant nutrient ; salinity ; antioxidant defense system ; glyoxalase system ; biochar ; licorice ; soil enzymes ; nutrients ; root system ; ALS ; BCAA ; low oxygen ; flooding ; AIP1 ; Eucommia ulmoides Oliver ; trait variations ; probability grading ; quantitative traits ; planting models ; leaves ; cytokinin ; TD-K ; thidiazuron ; INCYDE ; CPPU ; isopentenyl transferase ; IPT ; cytokinin oxidase/dehydrogenase ; CKX ; wheat ; barley ; yield ; cucumber ; QTL-seq ; SNP markers ; white immature fruit skin color ; ecological costs ; germination models ; herbicide resistance ; hydrotime ; target-site resistance ; hydrogen peroxide ; sodium hypochlorite ; generalized regression neural network ; genetic algorithm ; scarification ; seed dormancy ; plant tissue culture ; foliar descriptors ; leaf area ; models ; vine leaves ; Olea europaea L. ; olive ; genotype by sequencing (GBS) ; single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) ; whole-genome sequencing (WGS) ; reference genome ; plastid markers ; DNA barcoding ; ISSR markers ; Egyptian barley ; agro-morphological traits ; cluster analysis ; genetic variation ; biplot ; drought stress ; drying processes ; mathematical model ; plant hydric stress tolerance ; rate of weight loss ; RWLMod ; water evaporation ; photosynthesis ; elevated CO2 ; Rubisco ; electron transport ; light ; diurnal cycle ; sexual propagation ; cold stratification ; in situ ; ex situ ; plant endemism ; Morocco ; biodiversity ; ex-situ conservation ; protocols ; germplasm ; forest berries ; brushing ; lettuce ; chicory ; phytochemicals ; antioxidant capacity ; Ziziphus lotus ; phenolics ; SH-SY5Y cell line ; chromatography ; Koelreuteria paniculata ; dry ethanol extracts ; GC-MS analysis ; chemical compounds ; antitumor and antimicrobial activities ; medicinal plant ; bioactive compounds ; plant-derived secondary metabolites (PDSM) ; cell suspension culture (CSC) ; bioreactor engineering ; apple ; Golden Delicious ; Top Red ; fruitlet thinners ; light reactions ; electron transport rate ; photoprotective mechanism ; state transitions ; PSII repair cycle ; vegetation structure ; environmental variables ; PC-ORD ; plant community assembly ; Himalaya ; allopolyploidy ; interspecific hybridization ; unreduced gametes ; cytological diploidization ; genomic changes ; root length ; root/shoot ratio ; specific root length ; Saragolle Lucana ; seed coating ; heavy metals ; evolution ; hyperaccumulation ; black chokeberry (Aronia melanocarpa) ; anthocyanin stability ; herbs ; co-pigmentation ; color stability ; functional foods/beverages ; biotechnological tools ; ethnomedicine ; in vitro culture ; genetic improvement ; pollen ; tip growth ; calcium ; calcium dependent protein kinase ; Rho Guanine Dissociation Inhibitor ; ROP GTPase ; RhoGDI displacement factor ; polarity ; guar ; gene expression ; qRT-PCR ; RNA-Seq ; salt stress ; salt tolerance ; stress ; transcriptome ; D-tagatose ; IFP48 ; induced resistance ; sweet immunity ; sugar-enhanced defense ; Plasmopara viticola ; Botrytis cinerea ; Vitis vinifera ; human diet ; edible wild plants ; Plantago coronopus L. ; Rumex acetosa L. ; Cichorium intybus L. ; Artemisia dracunculus L. ; phytochemistry ; anti-inflammatory properties ; stem photosynthesis ; hydraulic recovery ; soaking ; X-ray micro-CT ; bark water uptake ; embolism ; genetic resources ; Solanaceae ; Cucumis ; Lactuca ; diversity ; vegetables ; genebank ; essential oil ; iNOS ; interleukin ; lavenders ; NF-κB ; glycosyltransferases ; ER-Golgi trafficking ; mechanism of protein sorting ; COPI and COPII complexes ; sequences and motifs involved in trafficking ; Arabidopsis ; gene regulation ; protein-protein interaction ; transcription factor ; WRI1 ; TCP20 ; lipases ; lipid metabolism ; plant-environment interactions ; reproductive development ; vegetative development ; Urtica dioica ; soilless systems ; cultivated nettle ; stress factors ; functional properties ; preharvest sprouting ; MKK3 ; maternal and paternal expressed genes ; imprinted genes ; polycomb repressive complex 2 ; mRNA processing bodies ; ribonucleic binding proteins ; monosomes ; ethylene ; elicitors ; fruit ripening ; ACC synthase/oxidase ; GC-MS ; polyamines ; Vigna genus ; introgression ; hybridisation ; phylogeny ; de novo domestication ; feralisation ; novel ecosystems ; complex networks ; tree communities ; Lantana camara ; Prosopis juliflora ; ascorbic acid ; genetic diversity ; molecular markers ; aquaculture pond sediment ; recovery ; Triticum aestivum ; chlorophyll fluorescence ; wheat grass juice quality ; UV-B radiation ; olive tree ; metabolomic ; phenolic profile ; lipophilic profile ; ecophysiology ; environment ; arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis ; comparative transcriptomics ; Arum-type ; Paris-type ; Solanum lycopersicum ; Rhizophagus irregularis ; Gigaspora margarita ; Camelina sativa ; semi-arid lands ; biofuel feedstock ; biodiesel ; renewable diesel ; crop breeding ; transgenesis ; genome editing ; Xanthomonas euvesicatoria ; host associate factor ; comparative genomics ; Cannabis sativa L. ; chemovars ; secondary metabolites ; trichomes ; residual by-products ; biogeography ; cardioid ; islands ; geometric models ; Mediterranean flora ; Silene ; super-ellipse ; abscisic acid ; aromatic herb ; ascorbate-glutathione cycle ; jasmonic acid ; lipoic acid ; oxidative stress ; salicylic acid ; Salvia officinalis ; drought ; state of stress ; tolerance ; avoidance ; stress survival ; amino acids ; nitrate reductase ; glutamine synthetase ; plants mycorrhized ; dark septate ; Daphne genkwa ; Thymelaeaceae ; flavonoids ; design of experiments ; blooming stages ; germination stimulant ; witchweed ; methyl phenlactonoates (MPs) ; Nijmegen-1 ; weed ; plant development ; vasculature ; leaf traces ; structure ; microtomography ; Euphorbiaceae ; in vitro crop ; gamma radiation ; ionizing radiation ; mutants ; Fumaria scheleicheri Soy. Will. ; isoquinoline alkaloids ; HPLC-DAD ; in vitro anti-cholinesterase ; cytotoxic ; antioxidant ; ABC model ; hop ; transcription factors ; type-II MADS box ; type-I MADS-box ; AFLP ; carpological traits ; genetic structure ; molecular systematics ; plastid phylogeny ; Valerianaceae ; auxins ; embryogenic calli ; HPLC ; IAA ; immunohistochemistry ; deficit irrigation ; grape quality ; phenology ; plant diseases ; bacterium ; symptoms ; molecular classification ; common juniper ; common larch ; Cupressaceae ; Pinaceae ; SPME-GC-MS ; volatile compounds ; herbicidal activity ; weed control ; trait association ; GCV ; genetic variability ; genetic advance ; heritability ; PCV ; Cicer arietinum L. ; gold nanoparticles ; carbon nanotubes ; ATR-FTIR spectroscopy ; machine learning techniques ; principal component analysis ; support vector machine classification ; citrus ; melanose ; Diaporthe citri ; epidemiology ; symptomatology ; Pseudomonas cannabina pv. alisalensis ; resistance-nodulation-cell division transporter ; type-three secretion system ; phytoalexin ; brassinin ; glucosinolate ; cabbage ; flowering ; juvenile traits ; genetic stability ; flow cytometry ; somaclonal variation ; thorniness ; carbohydrates ; protein ; lipids ; fatty acids ; minerals ; plastome ; Plicosepalus acaciae ; Plicosepalus curviflorus ; loranthaceae ; mistletoe ; phylogenetic relationship ; plastome structure ; comparative analysis ; magnetic resonance imaging ; Solanum tuberosum ; multi-exponential transverse relaxation ; water stress ; broccoli ; human nutrition ; improved health ; melatonin ; postharvest ; apricot ; pollen tube ; pollination ; Prunus armeniaca ; S-alleles ; Populus ; hexokinase ; sucrose metabolism ; sugar signaling ; stress and defense ; centres of origin ; crop wild relatives ; crop domestication ; cryopreservation ; conservation ; in vitro storage ; ecosystem restoration ; plant breeding ; acidification ; alkalinisation ; bud burst ; freezing ; Malus domestica ; pH ; Picea abies ; Pinus cembra ; histone modification ; Taraxacum kok-saghyz ; natural rubber ; high light stress ; singlet oxygen ; signalling ; GPX5 ; beta cyclocitral ; acrolein ; glutathione peroxidase ; carbonyl ; transcription ; SLIM1 transcription factor ; sulfur deficiency ; Arabidopsis thaliana ; sulfate transporter ; sulfate assimilation ; stress tolerance ; LRR-RLK receptors ; dodders ; parasitic plants ; proteomics ; virus vertical transmission ; CMV-Fny strain ; pseudorecombinant virus ; chimeric virus ; infection rate ; seed-growth tests ; electron microscopy ; circular dichroism spectroscopy ; viral assembly ; Adiantetea capilli-veneris ; demographic analysis ; ecology ; IUCN ; plant conservation ; phytosociology ; rupicolous habitat ; n/a ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences
    Language: English
    Format: application/octet-stream
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2023-09-11
    Description: 10th Anniversary of Plants—Recent Advances and Perspectives is a scientific paper collection specially published on the anniversary of Plants. Covering all major areas of plant science, it is a valuable guide through current achievements and future discoveries in this scientific field.
    Keywords: Secale cereale ; Secale montanum ; Secale strictum ; QTL mapping ; molecular marker ; self-incompatibility ; fertility ; seed set ; abiotic stress ; cell homeostasis ; heterologous host synthetic approach ; terpenophenolics ; brown spot ; ACT ; fungus culture filtrate ; mycotoxin ; fruit development ; fruit gauge ; VPD ; Mangifera indica ; cell division ; cell expansion ; ripening ; pulegone ; isomenthone ; menthone ; thymol ; p-cymene ; chemotypes ; seasonal variation ; enantiomeric distribution ; label-free proteomics ; Panax ginseng ; ginsenosides ; cytochrome p450 ; UDP-glycosyltransferase ; MEP pathway ; MVA pathway ; TCA/acetone ; methanol/chloroform ; endophytes ; foliar pathogens ; pathogenicity ; taxonomy ; Thymus vulgaris ; Crithmum maritimum ; leather artifacts ; essential oils ; anti-bacterial activity ; Euphorbia dendroides L. ; aerial parts ; polyphenols ; antioxidant activity ; anti-inflammatory activity ; toxicity ; calcium oxalate crystals ; colleter ; extrafloral nectaries ; resin gland ; bud protection ; plant-environment interaction ; carbohydrate metabolism ; microarray ; crop ; rice ; productivity ; endosperm ; geometry ; morphology ; seed shape ; Vitaceae ; exDNA ; environmental DNA ; DNA sensing ; self-DNA inhibition ; autotoxicity ; plant response ; DAMP ; PAMP ; EDAP ; climate change ; food security ; Mediterranean countries ; sustainable exploitation ; phytogenetic resources ; candidate gene ; quantitative trait locus ; recombinant inbred line ; soybean drought tolerance ; weighted drought coefficient ; antioxidants ; biostimulants ; biotic stress ; GABA ; metabolism ; phytohormones ; reactive oxygen species ; signaling ; tricarboxylic acid cycle ; bacterial functions ; co-presence networks ; metagenomics ; microbial ecology ; plant domestication ; trace element ; plant nutrient ; salinity ; antioxidant defense system ; glyoxalase system ; biochar ; licorice ; soil enzymes ; nutrients ; root system ; ALS ; BCAA ; low oxygen ; flooding ; AIP1 ; Eucommia ulmoides Oliver ; trait variations ; probability grading ; quantitative traits ; planting models ; leaves ; cytokinin ; TD-K ; thidiazuron ; INCYDE ; CPPU ; isopentenyl transferase ; IPT ; cytokinin oxidase/dehydrogenase ; CKX ; wheat ; barley ; yield ; cucumber ; QTL-seq ; SNP markers ; white immature fruit skin color ; ecological costs ; germination models ; herbicide resistance ; hydrotime ; target-site resistance ; hydrogen peroxide ; sodium hypochlorite ; generalized regression neural network ; genetic algorithm ; scarification ; seed dormancy ; plant tissue culture ; foliar descriptors ; leaf area ; models ; vine leaves ; Olea europaea L. ; olive ; genotype by sequencing (GBS) ; single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) ; whole-genome sequencing (WGS) ; reference genome ; plastid markers ; DNA barcoding ; ISSR markers ; Egyptian barley ; agro-morphological traits ; cluster analysis ; genetic variation ; biplot ; drought stress ; drying processes ; mathematical model ; plant hydric stress tolerance ; rate of weight loss ; RWLMod ; water evaporation ; photosynthesis ; elevated CO2 ; Rubisco ; electron transport ; light ; diurnal cycle ; sexual propagation ; cold stratification ; in situ ; ex situ ; plant endemism ; Morocco ; biodiversity ; ex-situ conservation ; protocols ; germplasm ; forest berries ; brushing ; lettuce ; chicory ; phytochemicals ; antioxidant capacity ; Ziziphus lotus ; phenolics ; SH-SY5Y cell line ; chromatography ; Koelreuteria paniculata ; dry ethanol extracts ; GC-MS analysis ; chemical compounds ; antitumor and antimicrobial activities ; medicinal plant ; bioactive compounds ; plant-derived secondary metabolites (PDSM) ; cell suspension culture (CSC) ; bioreactor engineering ; apple ; Golden Delicious ; Top Red ; fruitlet thinners ; light reactions ; electron transport rate ; photoprotective mechanism ; state transitions ; PSII repair cycle ; vegetation structure ; environmental variables ; PC-ORD ; plant community assembly ; Himalaya ; allopolyploidy ; interspecific hybridization ; unreduced gametes ; cytological diploidization ; genomic changes ; root length ; root/shoot ratio ; specific root length ; Saragolle Lucana ; seed coating ; heavy metals ; evolution ; hyperaccumulation ; black chokeberry (Aronia melanocarpa) ; anthocyanin stability ; herbs ; co-pigmentation ; color stability ; functional foods/beverages ; biotechnological tools ; ethnomedicine ; in vitro culture ; genetic improvement ; pollen ; tip growth ; calcium ; calcium dependent protein kinase ; Rho Guanine Dissociation Inhibitor ; ROP GTPase ; RhoGDI displacement factor ; polarity ; guar ; gene expression ; qRT-PCR ; RNA-Seq ; salt stress ; salt tolerance ; stress ; transcriptome ; D-tagatose ; IFP48 ; induced resistance ; sweet immunity ; sugar-enhanced defense ; Plasmopara viticola ; Botrytis cinerea ; Vitis vinifera ; human diet ; edible wild plants ; Plantago coronopus L. ; Rumex acetosa L. ; Cichorium intybus L. ; Artemisia dracunculus L. ; phytochemistry ; anti-inflammatory properties ; stem photosynthesis ; hydraulic recovery ; soaking ; X-ray micro-CT ; bark water uptake ; embolism ; genetic resources ; Solanaceae ; Cucumis ; Lactuca ; diversity ; vegetables ; genebank ; essential oil ; iNOS ; interleukin ; lavenders ; NF-κB ; glycosyltransferases ; ER-Golgi trafficking ; mechanism of protein sorting ; COPI and COPII complexes ; sequences and motifs involved in trafficking ; Arabidopsis ; gene regulation ; protein-protein interaction ; transcription factor ; WRI1 ; TCP20 ; lipases ; lipid metabolism ; plant-environment interactions ; reproductive development ; vegetative development ; Urtica dioica ; soilless systems ; cultivated nettle ; stress factors ; functional properties ; preharvest sprouting ; MKK3 ; maternal and paternal expressed genes ; imprinted genes ; polycomb repressive complex 2 ; mRNA processing bodies ; ribonucleic binding proteins ; monosomes ; ethylene ; elicitors ; fruit ripening ; ACC synthase/oxidase ; GC-MS ; polyamines ; Vigna genus ; introgression ; hybridisation ; phylogeny ; de novo domestication ; feralisation ; novel ecosystems ; complex networks ; tree communities ; Lantana camara ; Prosopis juliflora ; ascorbic acid ; genetic diversity ; molecular markers ; aquaculture pond sediment ; recovery ; Triticum aestivum ; chlorophyll fluorescence ; wheat grass juice quality ; UV-B radiation ; olive tree ; metabolomic ; phenolic profile ; lipophilic profile ; ecophysiology ; environment ; arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis ; comparative transcriptomics ; Arum-type ; Paris-type ; Solanum lycopersicum ; Rhizophagus irregularis ; Gigaspora margarita ; Camelina sativa ; semi-arid lands ; biofuel feedstock ; biodiesel ; renewable diesel ; crop breeding ; transgenesis ; genome editing ; Xanthomonas euvesicatoria ; host associate factor ; comparative genomics ; Cannabis sativa L. ; chemovars ; secondary metabolites ; trichomes ; residual by-products ; biogeography ; cardioid ; islands ; geometric models ; Mediterranean flora ; Silene ; super-ellipse ; abscisic acid ; aromatic herb ; ascorbate-glutathione cycle ; jasmonic acid ; lipoic acid ; oxidative stress ; salicylic acid ; Salvia officinalis ; drought ; state of stress ; tolerance ; avoidance ; stress survival ; amino acids ; nitrate reductase ; glutamine synthetase ; plants mycorrhized ; dark septate ; Daphne genkwa ; Thymelaeaceae ; flavonoids ; design of experiments ; blooming stages ; germination stimulant ; witchweed ; methyl phenlactonoates (MPs) ; Nijmegen-1 ; weed ; plant development ; vasculature ; leaf traces ; structure ; microtomography ; Euphorbiaceae ; in vitro crop ; gamma radiation ; ionizing radiation ; mutants ; Fumaria scheleicheri Soy. Will. ; isoquinoline alkaloids ; HPLC-DAD ; in vitro anti-cholinesterase ; cytotoxic ; antioxidant ; ABC model ; hop ; transcription factors ; type-II MADS box ; type-I MADS-box ; AFLP ; carpological traits ; genetic structure ; molecular systematics ; plastid phylogeny ; Valerianaceae ; auxins ; embryogenic calli ; HPLC ; IAA ; immunohistochemistry ; deficit irrigation ; grape quality ; phenology ; plant diseases ; bacterium ; symptoms ; molecular classification ; common juniper ; common larch ; Cupressaceae ; Pinaceae ; SPME-GC-MS ; volatile compounds ; herbicidal activity ; weed control ; trait association ; GCV ; genetic variability ; genetic advance ; heritability ; PCV ; Cicer arietinum L. ; gold nanoparticles ; carbon nanotubes ; ATR-FTIR spectroscopy ; machine learning techniques ; principal component analysis ; support vector machine classification ; citrus ; melanose ; Diaporthe citri ; epidemiology ; symptomatology ; Pseudomonas cannabina pv. alisalensis ; resistance-nodulation-cell division transporter ; type-three secretion system ; phytoalexin ; brassinin ; glucosinolate ; cabbage ; flowering ; juvenile traits ; genetic stability ; flow cytometry ; somaclonal variation ; thorniness ; carbohydrates ; protein ; lipids ; fatty acids ; minerals ; plastome ; Plicosepalus acaciae ; Plicosepalus curviflorus ; loranthaceae ; mistletoe ; phylogenetic relationship ; plastome structure ; comparative analysis ; magnetic resonance imaging ; Solanum tuberosum ; multi-exponential transverse relaxation ; water stress ; broccoli ; human nutrition ; improved health ; melatonin ; postharvest ; apricot ; pollen tube ; pollination ; Prunus armeniaca ; S-alleles ; Populus ; hexokinase ; sucrose metabolism ; sugar signaling ; stress and defense ; centres of origin ; crop wild relatives ; crop domestication ; cryopreservation ; conservation ; in vitro storage ; ecosystem restoration ; plant breeding ; acidification ; alkalinisation ; bud burst ; freezing ; Malus domestica ; pH ; Picea abies ; Pinus cembra ; histone modification ; Taraxacum kok-saghyz ; natural rubber ; high light stress ; singlet oxygen ; signalling ; GPX5 ; beta cyclocitral ; acrolein ; glutathione peroxidase ; carbonyl ; transcription ; SLIM1 transcription factor ; sulfur deficiency ; Arabidopsis thaliana ; sulfate transporter ; sulfate assimilation ; stress tolerance ; LRR-RLK receptors ; dodders ; parasitic plants ; proteomics ; virus vertical transmission ; CMV-Fny strain ; pseudorecombinant virus ; chimeric virus ; infection rate ; seed-growth tests ; electron microscopy ; circular dichroism spectroscopy ; viral assembly ; Adiantetea capilli-veneris ; demographic analysis ; ecology ; IUCN ; plant conservation ; phytosociology ; rupicolous habitat ; n/a ; bic Book Industry Communication::G Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research & information: general ; bic Book Industry Communication::P Mathematics & science::PS Biology, life sciences
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2023-01-18
    Description: This manual aims to make information resources and technical advice available in order to support the deployment of biopesticides, which include microbials (e.g. bacteria, algae, protozoa, viruses and fungi), macrobials (e.g. predatory insects, parasitoids and beneficial nematodes), botanicals, and semiochemicals. It is intended to be a one-stop shop to address the information needs of the key groups who are responsible for selecting, sourcing and using biopesticides in the tobacco production system. Chapter 2 provides information for decision makers to support selection of biopesticide active substances. It also provides guidelines for trial managers on experimental design, data collection and reporting. Chapter 3 provides guidance for sourcing biopesticides. It also includes manuals for the local production of three types of biopesticide: Trichogramma; neem [Azadirachta indica]; and fungal biopesticides such as Trichoderma. Chapter 4 presents training materials to provide an overview of biopesticides in general together with detailed information on how to work with the key biopesticides that have already been used successfully to manage key pests in tobacco.
    Keywords: SB1-1110 ; QH540-549.5 ; S1-972 ; biological control agents ; Solanales ; arthropods ; insect nematodes ; eudicots ; aquatic species ; entomopathogens ; botanical pesticides ; tobacco ; animals ; Solanaceae ; pest control ; beneficial organisms ; entomophilic nematodes ; eukaryotes ; predacious insects ; Nicotiana ; data logging ; plant pests ; biocontrol agents ; biological control ; insects ; information services ; information sources ; plot design ; decision making ; parasitoids ; manuals ; pests ; handbooks ; pathogens ; plants ; aquatic organisms ; semiochemicals ; experimental design ; aquatic plants ; biocontrol ; predators ; predatory insects ; data collection ; nematodes ; natural enemies ; beneficial species ; biological control organisms ; angiosperms ; parasites ; Hexapoda ; Spermatophyta ; choice ; predaceous insects ; invertebrates ; bic Book Industry Communication::K Economics, finance, business & management::KN Industry & industrial studies::KND Manufacturing industries::KNDF Food manufacturing & related industries::KNDF1 Tobacco industry ; bic Book Industry Communication::T Technology, engineering, agriculture::TV Agriculture & farming::TVP Pest control
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  • 6
    facet.materialart.
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-27
    Description: This theme issue is to celebrate Professor Robert Verpoorte’s 75th birthday. Prof. Verpoorte has been working in Leiden University over 40 years. There is no need to dwell upon the contributions of Dr. Verpoorte to plant-derived natural products research during his whole life. Dr. Verpoorte was a highly productive scientist throughout his academic career, with over 800 scientific publications in the form of research papers, books, and book chapters. His research interests are very diverse, cover- ing numerous topics related to plant-based natural products such as plant cell biotech- nology, biosynthesis, metabolomics, genetic engineering, and green technology, as well as the isolation of new biologically active compounds. He has left indelible footprints in all these fields, and he is widely recognised as a pioneer in the work of the biosynthesis of indole alkaloids, NMR-based metabolomics, and green technology in natural products production. As close friends and colleagues who have been in nearly daily contact with him over the last 20 years viewing all of these remarkable scientific contributions, we felt compelled to recognize this by the publication of a Special Issue of this journal dedicated to him.Thus, this Special Issue has now finally been released with the help of many of his colleagues and former students as a token of our gratitude to his impressive work.The Special Issue covers five main natural products topics: (1) chemical profiling and metabolomics, (2) separation/isolation and identification of plant specialized metabolites, (3) pharmacognosy of natural products to identify bioactive molecules from natural prod- ucts, (4) novel formulation of natural products, and (5) overview of natural products as a source of bioactive molecules.
    Keywords: natural extract ; glycerin ; chemical profiling ; centrifugal partition chromatography ; 13C nuclear magnetic resonance ; cosmetic industry ; Psychotria malayana Jack ; type 2 diabetes ; α-glucosidase inhibitors ; LC-MS ; metabolomics ; molecular docking ; colorectal cancer ; HCT 116 ; telomerase ; telomerase inhibitor ; berberine ; downregulation ; cell cycle arrest ; telomere erosion ; molecular imaging ; direct analysis in real-time mass spectrometry ; ephedra alkaloids ; ephedrine ; methylephedrine ; Ephedra sinica ; natural products ; dereplication ; databases ; spectroscopy ; taxonomy ; molecular structures ; lignans ; secoisolariciresinol ; RNA interference ; flax ; osmotic stress ; 1H-NMR ; ionic liquids ; oxypeucedanin hydrate ; byakangelicin ; A. dahurica ; back-extraction ; enrichment ; plum brandy ; GC-FID-MS ; enzyme inhibition assay ; antibacterial assay ; effect-directed analysis ; bioassay ; botanicals ; health food ; protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) ; PTP-MEG2 ; phloridzin ; glucose-uptake ; Eleutherococcus senticosus ; fruits ; eleutherosides ; nutri-pharmacological ; herbs ; inflammation ; docking ; NuBBE database ; chalcones ; Nacobbus aberrans ; nematicidal activity ; α-terthienyl ; stigmasterol ; quercetagetin derivatives ; 9-O-angeloyl-retronecine N-oxide ; alkaloid ; Solanaceae ; tropane ; indole ; pyrrolidine ; Datura ; terpenoid ; signaling ; chemical cue ; kairomone ; potentiation ; cytotoxic activity ; NMR ; Ononis diffusa ; Ononis variegata ; oxylipins ; toronjil ; Mexican agastache ; aromatic plants ; weld ; Reseda luteola L. ; natural yellow dye ; μ-analysis ; micro-extraction of wool ; UHPLC ; fingerprinting ; flavones ; structure elucidation ; n/a ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general
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  • 7
    facet.materialart.
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    MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Publication Date: 2024-03-27
    Description: Food products are very complex mixtures consisting of naturally occurring compounds and other substances, generally originating from technological processes, agrochemical treatments, or packaging materials. However, food is no longer just a biological necessity for survival. Society demands healthy and safe food, but it is also increasingly interested in other quality attributes more related to the origin of the food, the agricultural production processes used, the presence or not of functional compounds, etc. Improved methods for the determination of authenticity, standardization, and efficacy of nutritional properties in natural food products are required to guarantee their quality and for the growth and regulation of the market. Nowadays, liquid chromatography with ultraviolet detection, or coupled to mass spectrometry and high-resolution mass spectrometry, are among the most powerful techniques to address food safety issues and to guarantee food authenticity in order to prevent fraud. The aim of this book is to gather review articles and original research papers focused on the development of analytical techniques based on liquid chromatography for the analysis of food. This book is comprised of six valuable scientific contributions, including five original research manuscripts and one review article, dealing with the employment of liquid chromatography techniques for the characterization and analysis of feed and food, including fruits, extra virgin olive oils, confectionery oils, sparkling wines and soybeans.
    Keywords: confectionery fats ; positional isomers ; silver-ion HPLC ; triglycerides ; high performance liquid chromatography ; UV detection ; multivariate calibration ; food authentication ; olive oils ; fraud quantitation ; controlled environment ; far infrared irradiation (FIR) ; light emitting diode (LED) light ; flavonoid ; soybean sprouts ; food and feed analysis ; liquid chromatography ; challenges ; nutritional analysis ; additives ; contaminants ; polyphenols ; protected designation of origin ; coupages ; sparkling wine (cava) ; characterization ; chemometrics ; Passifloraceae ; Solanaceae ; hypoglycaemic ; α-amylase ; n/a ; thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GP Research and information: general
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  • 8
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    Sexual plant reproduction 12 (2000), S. 333-337 
    ISSN: 1432-2145
    Keywords: Key words Unilateral incongruity ; Interspecific cross ; Gemome ; Solanaceae ; Tobacco
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  Nicotiana tabacum shows unilateral pollen-pistil incongruity with N. rustica. If N. tabacum is pollinated with N. rustica, growth of the pollen tube is arrested in the middle of the style, and abundant callose deposition, tube swelling and tube winding are observed. An attempt was made to clarify the genomic factors responsible for this pollen-pistil incongruity. N. tabacum was pollinated with N. paniculata or N. undulata, progenitors of amphidiploid N. rustica. When pollinated with N. undulata, growth of the pollen tube was arrested in the middle of the style and showed abnormal morphology similar to that with N. rustica, but when pollinated with N. paniculata the pollen tube reached near the base of the style and was almost normal in appearance. These observations suggest that the factors responsible for the pollen tube abnormality of N. rustica are derived from the N. undulata genome.We also used N. sylvestris, N. glutinosa and N. otophora as pistilar parents and N. rustica or its progenitors as pollen parents to examine the genomic factors of the pistilate parents. The pollen tube features of these three species in the pistils of N. sylvestris were similar to those in the pistil of N. tabacum.
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  • 9
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    Theoretical and applied genetics 100 (2000), S. 232-241 
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Key words Comparative mapping ; Homoeologous recombination ; Segregation distortion ; Solanaceae ; Tomato
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  The wild nightshade Solanum lycopersicoides (accessionLA2951) was backcrossed to the cultivated tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum cv ’VF36’), then inbred through single-seed descent for several generations. Over 300 backcross-inbred families thereby derived were genotyped at 139 marker loci, consisting of RFLPs, allozymes, and monogenic morphological markers, to identify introgressed S. lycopersicoides chromosomes and segments thereof. The pattern of genotypes observed in the lines indicated a high degree of overall synteny between the S. lycopersicoides genome and that of tomato. Two putative single-copy RFLP probes revealed secondary loci in this wide cross. Recovery of the L. esculentum genome was more rapid than expected, with an average value in the BC2 generation of 97.8%, versus the expected value of 87.5%. This was due to widespread segregation distortion that favored L. esculentum alleles as well as a tendency for plants homozygous for in- trogressed segments to be partially or completely male-sterile, thereby preventing the fixation of S. lycopersicoides markers in many lines. Despite these difficulties, nearly every S. lycopersicoides marker (or approximately 98% of the genome, measured in centi Morgans) was represented in at least 1 backcross-inbred line, with only a region on chromosome 4L missing from the population as a whole. Although the extent of transmission and fixation of introgressed segments varied according to chromosome, overall approximately 66% of the S. lycopersicoides genome was represented by homozygous in- trogressions with sufficient fertility to reproduce by self-pollination. An excess of terminal (vs. interstitial) segments was noted, and putative heterozygous substitutions for chromosomes 6, 7, 8, and 10 were found. Recombination within certain introgressed regions was reduced over 100-fold. These backcross-inbred lines are expected to facilitate the genetic analysis of traits identified in S. lycopersicoides and their transfer into horticultural tomatoes.
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Key words PVY ; TEV ; Lycopersicon, Solanum ; Solanaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  The dominant gene Pvr7 from Capsicum chinense Jacq. ’PI159236’ confers resistance to the pepper mottle potyvirus (PepMoV) Florida (V1182) strain. This gene is tightly linked to the dominant potyvirus resistance gene Pvr4 with observed recombination frequencies of 0.012 to 0.016. A cleaved amplified polymorphic sequence (CAPS) marker linked to Pvr4 was used to localize Pvr4 and, by extension, Pvr7, to linkage group 10 on an interspecific map of pepper. Our results indicated that Pvr4, Pvr7, and Tsw, a gene conferring resistance to tomato spotted wilt virus, comprise the first identified cluster of dominant disease resistance genes in Capsicum L. This position does not correspond to the locations of dominant potyvirus resistance genes in potato or to the positions of any other mapped solanaceous resistance genes or resistance gene homologues.
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  • 11
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    Plant cell, tissue and organ culture 62 (2000), S. 125-133 
    ISSN: 1573-5044
    Keywords: Duboisia myoporoides ; plant growth regulators ; shoot culture ; Solanaceae ; tropane alkaloid
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Leaf explants of Duboisia myoporoides R. Br. were exposed to 65 different cytokinin/auxin combinations and the morphogenetic responses compared. Two different types of calluses were induced depending on the cytokinin/auxin combinations used for callus induction. Non-rooted shoots were regenerated from calluses induced with 7 different cytokinin/auxin combinations, cultured in the regeneration medium and also from the calluses induced with 2 different cytokinin/auxin combinations, cultured in the callus induction medium. Shoot-bud regenerating ability of the calluses, number of leaves formed/shoot, lengths of the leaves and shoots and tropane alkaloid biosynthetic ability of the non-rooted shoots depended on the cytokinin/auxin combinations used at the callus induction stage. Hyoscyamine and scopolamine were detected in the 11-week-old callus induced with BA 10 μM + NAA 1 μM. These alkaloids were also detected in the 6 and 9-week-old non-rooted shoots regenerated from callus induced with BA 10 μM + NAA 1 μM, cultured in regeneration medium and from the callus induced with BA 10 μM + IBA 0.1 μM, cultured in callus induction medium. Shoots were regenerated in liquid medium supplemented with BA 10 μM + IBA 0.1 μM. No tropane alkaloids were detected in the 4-week-old shoot cultured in liquid medium.
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  • 12
    ISSN: 1573-1561
    Keywords: Macrosiphum euphorbiae ; potato aphid ; Homoptera ; Aphididae ; Solanaceae ; glycoalkaloids ; bioassay ; commersonine ; demissine ; solamargine ; solasodine ; solasonine
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract We report the deterrent, toxic, and antireproductive effect of several Solanum glycoalkaloids on the potato aphid, Macrosiphum euphorbiae, and discuss the structure–activity relationship of the tested compounds. The results indicate a structure-dependent biological effect of the glycoalkaloids, suggesting that, while the structure of the aglycone defines a basal biological effect, the carbohydrate moiety is crucial for the overall biological effect.
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  • 13
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    Journal of chemical ecology 26 (2000), S. 2187-2196 
    ISSN: 1573-1561
    Keywords: Phytotoxicity ; allelopathy ; withanolides ; Iochroma australe ; Solanaceae ; weed ; Sorghum halepense ; Chenopodium album ; crop ; Lactuca sativa
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Phytotoxic effects of Iochroma australe extract and 4,7,20-oxowithanolides were examined in Petri dish bioassays at 10, 100, and 1000 ppm. The extract and the major constituent (17S,20R,22R)-4β,7β,20α-trihydroxy-1oxowitha-2,5,24-trienolide (2) reduced growth of the radicle of the weeds Sorghum halepense (Monoct.) and Chenopodium album (Dicot.). Neither the extract nor withanolides had significant effect on germination or radicle length of the commercial crop species Lactuca sativa. From our experimental data we conclude that the withanolides tested here are natural products with selective herbicidal activity against weed species.
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  • 14
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    Plant systematics and evolution 225 (2000), S. 15-28 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Jaborosa integrifolia ; stigma-height polymorphism ; pollen tube growth ; breeding system ; self-incompatibility ; nectar sugar composition ; nectar removal effects ; Sphingidae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Jaborosa integrifolia exhibits stigma-height polymorphism. There are individuals with flowers where anthers and stigma are at the same height but the rule is variable herkogamy, the most common type (75%) being that with an exerted stigma. Self- and cross-tubes did not differ in their capability to reach the ovary (t = −0.67,P 〈 0.53); they had a high growth rate (6.95 ± 2.28 mm h−1). There is not autogamy but mostly self-incompatibility. Fruits from controlled cross-pollination showed the highest seed set and seed viability. The nectar sugar is characterized by a similar amount of glucose and fructose, and by the absence of sucrose. Although nectar secretion was continuous throughout the life of the flower, most nectar was secreted during the first 24 h after flower opening. Nectar production costs appear to be lower than in other species since nectar secretion is neither inhibited after a removal (i.e. a pollinator visit) nor reabsorbed as the flower ages. Sphingids visit the flowers mainly after midnight. They insert their proboscis down to the base of the corolla tube to reach the nectar. The upper limit to fruit production is set by pollinator visits. Fruits produced from open-pollinated flowers are often predated by numerous larvae (mainly lepidopteran ones). Considering that this species is mostly self-incompatible and pollination is limited, that each plant displays only a low number of flowers throughout the flowering season, and that there is a high rate of fruit predation, it is not surprising that fruits ofJ. integrifolia are so rare.
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  • 15
    ISSN: 1573-8248
    Keywords: classical biological control ; Solanaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract The leaf beetle Metriona elatior from Brazil-Argentina was screened in the Florida (USA)State quarantine facility as a potential biological control agent of tropical soda apple, Solanum viarum, a recently arrived weed species. Multiple-choice host-specificity tests were conducted in small cages (60 cm × 60 cm × 60 cm) using 95 plant species in 29 families. Adults fed heavily on the main target weed (S. viarum), and on turkey berry,Solanum torvum (noxious weed of Asiatic origin); fed moderately on red soda apple, Solanum capsicoides (weed of South American origin), and eggplant, Solanum melongena (economic crop); and fed lightly on aquatic soda apple, Solanum tampicense (weed of Mexican-Caribbean-Central American origin), and onsilverleaf nightshade, Solanum elaeagnifolium(native weed widely distributed). M.elatior adults laid 84 to 97% of their egg masses onS. viarum, and 3 to 16% on S. melongena. Non-choice host-specificity tests were also conducted in quarantine in which M. elatior adults and neonate larvae were exposed to 17 and 19 plant species, respectively. Tests with the neonates indicate that this insect was able to complete its development on S. viarum, S. torvum, S. melongena, and S. capsicoides. Although some adult feeding and oviposition occurred on S.melongena in quarantine on potted plants in small cages, no feeding or oviposition by M. elatiorwas observed in field experiments conducted in Brazil. Surveys in unsprayed S. melongena fields in Argentina and Brazil indicated that M. elatioris not a pest of S. melongena in South America. The evidence obtained from the South-American field surveys, Brazil open-field experiments, and Florida quarantine host specificity tests indicate that M. elatior causes significant feeding damage toS. viarum, and does not represent a threat to S. melongena crops in the USA. Therefore an application for permission to releaseM. elatior against S. viarum in the USA was submitted in October 1998.
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  • 16
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    Theoretical and applied genetics 99 (1999), S. 626-633 
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Key words DNA ; AFLP ; Solanaceae ; Solanum ; Eggplant ; Phenetic analysis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  The AFLP technique of DNA analysis was evaluated as a tool for assessing genetic relationships among the cultivated eggplant, S. melongena, and related species [Solanum L. subgenus Leptostemonum (Dunal) Bitter, section Melongena (Mill.) Dunal, series Incaniformia Bitter]. Genetic distances based on the AFLP data were estimated for 49 samples of 36 distinct accessions. Phenetic trees were constructed using Jaccard’s coefficient and UPGMA, and other clustering methods: they all had very high co-phenetic correlation values, and were found to be consistent with previous trees based on other data types, in particular ITS-1 sequences, isozymes and morphology, carried out on the same accessions. These results indicated that the AFLP technique is both an efficient and effective tool for determining genetic relationships among species of Solanum. A new classification is proposed for series Incaniformia.
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  • 17
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    Theoretical and applied genetics 99 (1999), S. 634-641 
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Key words DNA ; AFLP ; Solanaceae ; Datura ; Brugmansia ; phenetic analysis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  The AFLP technique was evaluated as a tool for assessing species relationships within the tribe Datureae and genetic distances were estimated for 47 accessions of over 12 species. The phenetic trees from various analyses of the AFLP data gave very high co-phenetic correlation values, and were found to be consistent with previous trees based on the analysis of different data types, in particular ITS-1 sequences, isozymes and morphology, carried out on the same accessions. These results indicated that the AFLP technique is both an efficient and effective tool for determining genetic relationships among taxa in the Solanaceae. A new classification is proposed for the tribe Datureae, which maintains the arborescent species as a separate genus, Brugmansia, and recognises three sections within the genus Datura; Stramonium, Dutra and Ceratocaulis. D. discolor, previously placed in section Dutra, was found to be intermediate between sections Dutra and Stramonium.
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  • 18
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Key words Capsicum annuum L. ; Solanaceae ; Meloidogyne spp. ; Nematode resistance ; Dominant Me3 gene
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  Capsicum annuum L. has resistance to root-knot nematodes (RKN) (Meloidogyne spp.), severe polyphagous pests that occur world-wide. Several single dominant genes confer this resistance. Some are highly specific, whereas others are effective against a wide range of species. The spectrum of resistance to eight clonal RKN populations of the major Meloidogyne species, M. arenaria (2 populations), M. incognita (2 populations), M. javanica (1 population), and M. hapla (3 populations) was studied using eight lines of Capsicum annuum. Host susceptibility was determined by counting the egg masses (EM) on the roots. Plants were classified into resistant (R; EM ≤ 5) or susceptible (H; EM 〉5) classes. The french cultivar Doux Long des Landes was susceptible to all nematodes tested. The other seven pepper lines were highly resistant to M. arenaria, M. javanica and one population of M. hapla. Variability in resistance was observed for the other two populations of M. hapla. Only lines PM687, PM217, Criollo de Morelos 334 and Yolo NR were resistant to M. incognita. To investigate the genetic basis of resistance in the highly resistant line PM687, the resistance of two progenies was tested with the two populations of M. incognita: 118 doubled-haploid (DH) lines obtained by androgenesis from F1 hybrids of the cross between PM687 and the susceptible cultivar Yolo Wonder, and 163 F2 progenies. For both nematodes populations, the segregation patterns 69 R / 49 S for DH lines and 163 R / 45 S for F2 progenies were obtained at 22°C and at high temperatures (32°C and 42°C). The presence of a single dominant gene that totally prevented multiplication of M. incognita was thus confirmed and its stability at high temperature was demonstrated. This study confirmed the value of C. annuum as a source of complete spectrum resistance to the major RKN.
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  • 19
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    Entomologia experimentalis et applicata 93 (1999), S. 209-215 
    ISSN: 1570-7458
    Keywords: host specificity ; experience ; feeding behavior ; stimulants ; deterrents ; Manduca sexta ; Solanaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The host range of Manduca sexta L. (Lepidoptera: Sphingidae) is restricted in nature to plants in the family Solanaceae. However, naive hatchling larvae often accept and continue their development on foliage from a wide spectrum of unrelated plants. In contrast, solanaceous-experienced larvae refuse to feed on other plants. Experiments were designed to explore the role of constituents of various plants in this behavioral phenomenon. Fourth instar larvae reared on solanaceous hosts: tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.), potato (Solanum tuberosum L.), or tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.), and the leguminous non-host cowpea (Vigna sinensis Savi), or on artificial diet based on wheat germ were tested for their acceptance or preference when offered a new diet in both choice and no-choice situations. Under no-choice conditions, acceptability of cowpea foliage was strongly affected by the larval dietary experience. Most larvae reared on solanaceous foliage did not feed, whereas those larvae reared on non-solanaceous food readily accepted cowpea. Moreover, solanaceous foliage, leaf discs and extracts were readily accepted by larvae regardless of their dietary experience. Larvae reared on any of the solanaceous plants strongly preferred cowpea discs that were treated with solanaceous extract, while larvae reared on non-solanaceous diets did not discriminate between treated and control discs. Assays of cowpea extracts as well as acceptance of cowpea discs treated with solanaceous extract indicated a lack of detectable deterrent in cowpea. Our results suggest that the mechanism for induced host specificity in M. sexta larvae involves development of a dependence on solanaceous chemical constituents. We argue that this dependence on host plant chemistry has adaptive significance.
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  • 20
    ISSN: 1573-6857
    Keywords: Lycopersicon ; Retrolyc1 ; retrotransposon ; Solanaceae ; Tntl
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Retrotransposons are ubiquitous mobile genetic elements that transpose through an RNA intermediate. One of the best known plant retrotransposon, Tnt1, was isolated from tobacco and showed an extensive distribution in the Nicotiana genus. We investigated the presence of related sequences in the Lycopersicon genus, another member of the Solanaceae family. Hybridization experiments performed using Tnt1 probes indicated that homologous sequences were present in all Lycopersicon species, indicating that these Tnt1-related sequences, that we named Retrolyc1, are distributed throughout the Lycopersicon genus. Different distribution patterns were detected between species, demonstrating a potential use of Retrolyc1 elements as molecular markers. An incomplete Retrolyc1 sequence, that we named Retrolyc1-1, was isolated from an L. peruvianum genomic library. Retrolyc1-1 shows extensive homology with Tnt1 sequences except in the LTR U3 region. Since this region is known to be involved in the control of transcription, this strongly suggests the existence of different patterns of regulation for Tnt1 and Retrolyc1 elements. The study of these two elements within the Solanaceae family may provide interesting models for retrotransposon evolution within this group and transmission in host genomes.
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  • 21
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    Plant cell, tissue and organ culture 56 (1999), S. 9-16 
    ISSN: 1573-5044
    Keywords: in vitro shoot regeneration ; micropropagation ; salinity ; Solanaceae ; tomato
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In vitro manipulation of Lycopersicon cheesmanii was attempted in order to evaluate its potential to improve salt tolerance of L. esculentum following somatic hybridisation of these two species. The main study concerned three populations of the typicum form (LCS) used for tissue culture and protoplast studies. The minor halophytic form (LCT) was used only for protoplast experiments. Mother plants were sown and propagated in vitro. Shoots (2-7) were obtained from explants (leaflets, petioles, cotyledons), through calli, when 3-4 mg l−1 BA, kinetin or 2iP were used in association with auxin. IAA (0.2 and 1 mg l−1 was the most efficient, while 2,4-D or NAA were sometimes inhibitory according to genotype and explant. Leaf protoplasts (2-5 × 107/g of fresh weight) were obtained from LCS and LCT. For LCT, protoplast division declined after five subcultures of the plantlets that had been established from seeds. Protoplast-derived calli were obtained from all populations (maximum PE 30% for LCS). However, they failed to regenerate shoots. Protoplast-derived calli involved in salt tolerance tests showed that LCS17 line was the most tolerant.
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  • 22
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    Plant cell, tissue and organ culture 57 (1999), S. 23-27 
    ISSN: 1573-5044
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; tissue culture ; Ashwagandha ; medicinal plant
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Callus cultures were initiated from axillary leaves, axillary shoots, hypocotyls, and root segments on Murashige and Skoog (MS) (1962) medium supplemented with 2,4-D (2 mg l−1) and KN (0.2 mg l−1). Shoots differentiated best from axillary shoot base callus on MS medium containing BA (2 mg l−1). Regenerated shoots rooted best on MS medium containing IBA (2 mg l−1) alone, and IBA (2 mg l−1) with IAA (2 mg l−1). Plantlets were transferred to pots containing sand and soil mixture, acclimatized in a culture room and afterwards transferred to the glasshouse.
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    Plant systematics and evolution 214 (1999), S. 103-130 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; sect.Petota ; Solanum brevicaule ; Domestication ; hybridization ; potatoes ; systematics
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract TheSolanum brevicaule complex is a group of morphologically very similar wild and cultivated potato taxa (Solanum sect.Petota). This study uses single to low-copy nuclear RFLPs and RAPDs to investigate their species boundaries and relationships. Cladistic analyses of both data sets are largely concordant with each other and with a recently published phenetic analyses of the same accessions using morphology. All three data sets separate members of the complex into populations from Peru and immediately adjacent northwestern Bolivia, including most cultivated species accessions, and populations from northwestern Bolivia to Argentina. The molecular results suggest that the complex is paraphyletic as currently circumscribed. Many species of theS. brevicaule complex should be relegated to synonymy.
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  • 24
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Nicotiana ; rDNA ; subrepeats ; molecular evolution
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The complete nucleotide sequence (3701 bp) of the intergenic spacer region between the 3′-end of 25S rRNA gene and the 5′-end of 18S rRNA gene (IGS) is described forNicotiana sylvestris. The IGS ofN. sylvestris consists of seven structural regions (SR) two of which are composed of subrepeats (SR II: three and one half copies of the 76 bp D-subrepeat and numerous short C-subrepeats; SR IV: five copies of the 142/136 bp A-subrepeat). A presumptive rRNA processing signal (CTTTT) is located at the beginning of SR I. An identical sequence is also present in each copy of the A-subrepeat. Each D-subrepeat in SR IIa contains at the 5′-end the conserved sequence (GAGGTTTTT) which may be involved in transcription termination. SR III (TG-rich) and SR IV (AT-rich) in the central part of IGS contain several potential replication origin sites. The transcription initiation site (TATATAAGGGGGG) is located at the border of SR IV and V. No spacer promoters have been found. SR V contains four copies of a CATGG motif that is also present in SR II, VI and VII. At the 5′-end of SR VII there are three copies of the 66 bp highly divergent B-subrepeat. Presumptive pre-rRNA processing signals are also present here. Possible hair-pin structures are described for SR V, VI and VII.
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  • 25
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Key words Potato virus X ; Resistance gene ; Genetic mapping ; RFLP ; Solanaceae
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  The line IvP35 of the diploid (2n=2x=24) cultivated potato species Solanum phureja (family Solanaceae) expresses hypersensitive resistance (H) to potato X potexvirus (PVX). In this study, a diploid potato population was produced using IvP35 as the male parent and a diploid line of S. tuberosum (87HW13.7) as the female parent and tested for resistance to PVX. Data indicated that H to PVX in IvP35 is a dominant, monogenically inherited trait controlled by a single gene, named Nx phu , that is in a simplex condition (Nxnx). RFLP analysis carried out on the progeny lines revealed 4 markers (CT220, TG328, CT112 and TG424) from the long arm of chromosome IX that were linked to the hypersensitive phenotype; the closest linkage was observed with the marker TG424. Previous authors have shown that the same region of chromosome IX contains the gene Sw-5 for resistance to tomato spotted wilt tospovirus in Lycopersicon peruvianum (Solanaceae).
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  • 26
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    Sexual plant reproduction 11 (1998), S. 251-256 
    ISSN: 1432-2145
    Keywords: Key words Nicotiana tabacum ; Pathogenesis related protein ; Solanaceae ; Stigmatic exudate ; Thaumatin-like protein
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  A cDNA clone that encodes a novel thaumatin-like glycosylated protein, SE39b, which constitutes one of the major proteins of the stigmatic exudate of tobacco, was isolated and sequenced. The deduced amino acid sequence of SE39b shows 37% identity with the pathogenesis-related protein of tobacco, PR-R1, and 52% identity with the thaumatin-like protein (TLP) of Arabidopsis. All 16 cysteine residues are conserved in SE39b as they are in all TLPs. Three potential glycosylation sites found in SE39b were consistent with a previous finding that concanavalin A has an affinity for SE39b. Northern blot and in situ analyses demonstrated that the gene was specifically expressed in the transmitting tissue of the stigma and style, and the transcript amounts reached maximum levels at anthesis. mRNA from orthologs of the gene of SE39b was detected in species of Cestreae, but not in species of Solaneae. SE39b should be categorized as a PR-like glycoprotein which is developmentally regulated and specifically expressed in the transmitting tissue of the stigma and style, such as Sp41 [(1,3)-β-glucanase], SK2 and Chi2;1 (chitinase).
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  • 27
    ISSN: 1573-5028
    Keywords: plant defense ; proteinase inhibitors ; systemic wound signaling ; Solanaceae
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    Notes: Abstract Prosystemin is the precursor protein of the 18 amino acid wound signal systemin which activates systemic defense in tomato leaves against insect herbivores (McGurl B, Pearce G, Orozco-Cardenas M, Ryan CA, Science 255 (1992) 1570–1573). Here, we report the isolation of cDNA sequences encoding prosystemin from potato (Solanum tuberosum), black nightshade (S. nigrum), and bell pepper (Capsicum annuum), all members of the Solanaceae family, using reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Pairwise comparisons of the predicted prosystemin proteins from the three species with tomato prosystemin and among each other indicated sequence identities ranging from 73% to 88%. The deduced systemin polypeptides were synthesized and tested for their capacities to induce the synthesis of the defensive proteinase inhibitors in tomato leaves. Potato and pepper systemins were approximately as active as tomato systemin, whereas nightshade systemin was ten-fold less active. The accumulation of proteinase inhibitor mRNA transcripts could be induced in each of these plants by treatment with the homologous systemin. As in the tomato, in potato, black nightshade, and bell pepper plants, prosystemin homologs appear to function as precursors of systemic wound signals.
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    Plant cell, tissue and organ culture 53 (1998), S. 197-204 
    ISSN: 1573-5044
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Solanum tuberosum ; sugar metabolism ; tuberization
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The development of axillary buds of potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) plants, cultured in vitro, was analyzed. Depending on the composition of the culture medium, the buds developed into either tubers (medium with 8% sucrose), shoots (1% sucrose), or stolons (8% sucrose and 0.5 μM gibberellin). Endogenous sugar and starch levels, and key-enzymes involved in the conversion of sucrose to starch were determined at different stages of development. Moreover, the spatial distribution of sugar levels and enzyme activities were determined within the developing structures. Glucose and fructose decreased upon tuber formation, most noticeably in the swelling parts, where also starch accumulated. The activities of sucrose synthase, fructokinase and ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase were highest under tuber-inducing conditions, the increase being confined to the tubers, and absent in the subtending stolons. It is concluded that changes in the measured parameters, observed under tuberizing conditions, are specifically related to the formation of the tuber, and are confined to the swelling part only.
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    Plant cell, tissue and organ culture 54 (1998), S. 93-95 
    ISSN: 1573-5044
    Keywords: African tobacco ; protoplast culture ; shoot regeneration ; Solanaceae
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Plants have been regenerated from Nicotiana africana Merxm. protoplasts isolated from cell suspensions. Two different sequences of media were assayed, one usually used to regenerate tobacco mesophyll protoplasts (K3,RMO) the other previously recommended for potato mesophyll protoplast regeneration (W-S-S, ST-1, ST-2, S-3). Only the media for potato protoplasts were efficient for African tobacco plant regeneration. The regeneration efficiency was 6.3 plants per 1000 plated protoplasts.
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  • 30
    ISSN: 1573-5044
    Keywords: androgenesis ; secondary embryogenesis ; Solanaceae ; Solanum phureja
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    Notes: Abstract Effects of colchicine on androgenesis of diploid potato (Solanum phureja Juz. & Buk.) and ploidy of anther-derived plants were examined in three experiments. In the first, no significant difference was found for mean embryos per anther of an interspecific potato clone after application of five colchicine treatments (0, 25, 50, 100 and 200 mg l-1) for 24 h to freshly excised anthers containing late uninucleate microspores. The same colchicine treatments were applied to six hybrid potato families in the second experiment. Families differed for number of embryos per anther and embryo regeneration frequency; however, androgenic response did not differ significantly among colchicine treatments. The 312 regenerated plants included 233 (75%) monoploids. The third experiment examined durations (0, 90 s vacuum infiltration, 24, 48 and 72 h) of high colchicine treatment (200 mg l-1) on anther culture of seedlings representing one family. Mean embryos per anther, though not statistically significant, ranged from 0.96 to 1.90 for 48 h colchicine and 90 s vacuum infiltration, respectively. There were 126 plants regenerated of which 62% were monoploid. Frequency of monoploid plants regenerated from colchicine treatments did not differ significantly. RAPD analysis was conducted on 26 anther-derived monoploids of one family, based on common flasks of origin. The 13 decamer primers revealed 54 polymorphic loci. These were used to characterize the monoploids genetically. From one flask, two pairs of monoploids among six examined were genetically indistinguishable. Examination of a second and third flask revealed, six of seven and three of seven monoploids that were genetically indistinguishable. These data suggest the regeneration of genetic clones within flasks and may indicate the occurrence of secondary embryogenesis during anther culture.
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    Plant cell, tissue and organ culture 53 (1998), S. 79-84 
    ISSN: 1573-5044
    Keywords: Capsicum annuum L. regeneration ; brassinolide ; Solanaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In vitro regeneration of sweet pepper (Capsicum annuum L. cvs Jupiter and Pimiento Perfection) has been performed via direct organogenesis. The resulting shoot-buds were placed on media containing 24-epi-brassinolide (EBR) 0.1 μM, a plant steroid lactone, in the presence or absence of zeatin 9.1 μM plus GA3 5.2 μM for further stem elongation. Different responses to these treatments were recorded depending upon the protocols used and the genotypes tested. It appears that EBR does not always act directly on stem elongation but may be an elicitor and/or an enhancer of elongation in concert with endogenous and other exogenously added growth regulators. Elongated shoots were easily rooted with alpha-naphtalenacetic acid 0.5 μM (0.1 mgl-1) and transfered to soil, and following acclimation were taken to maturity in the greenhouse.
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    Journal of chemical ecology 24 (1998), S. 1529-1549 
    ISSN: 1573-1561
    Keywords: Tobacco hornworm ; Solanaceae ; insect–plant interactions ; glandular trichomes ; exudate ; resistance polymorphism ; oviposition choice ; acyl sugar esters ; Lepidoptera ; Sphingidae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Natural populations of Datura wrightii in southern California consist of two distinctly different phenotypes. The leaves of one phenotype are densely covered with nonglandular trichomes and feel velvety. The other phenotype is covered with larger type IV glandular trichomes that excrete a sticky exudate. Neonate larvae of M. sexta reared on velvety leaves developed significantly faster than larvae on sticky leaves. Larvae on sticky leaves took 28% longer to reach the prepupal stage. Survival and pupal weight were not significantly different between the two groups. First instars of M. sexta had a significantly higher consumption rate on velvety leaves than on sticky leaves. Removal of the exudate from stickly leaves significantly increased larval consumption rates compared to unwashed controls. Female moths did not show an oviposition preference; both in the lab and in the field the two trichome phenotypes of D. wrightii received similar egg loads. Because there were no significant differences in other nutritional factors between the two plant phenotypes, we concluded that the exudate was responsible for the effect. We isolated a complex mixture of sugar esters (SE) as the biologically active compounds in the exudate of D. wrightii. The SE mixture was composed of glucose esterified with several combinations of straight chain C6–C9 acids. By comparing GC-MS spectra of synthetic SE with the SE extracted from D. wrightii, we identified one of the SE as 3′-O-hexanoyl glucose.
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  • 33
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    Plant systematics and evolution 210 (1998), S. 113-139 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Solanum ; Evolution ; male sterility ; breeding system ; dioecy ; inaperturate pollen ; pollen development ; palynology ; plant reproduction
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
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    Notes: Abstract Dioecy has evolved independently several times in the large, mostly tropical genusSolanum. In all cases of dioecy inSolanum functionally male flowers have normal anthers, normal pollen and reduced stigmas while functionally female flowers have stigmas and anthers that appear normal but contain non-functional, usually inaperturate pollen. The inaperturate pollen has living cytoplasm, but apparently never germinates and it has been hypothesised that the pollen in these functionally female flowers is retained as a pollinator reward. Pollen morphology is compared in twelve of the thirteen known dioecious species ofSolanum, and some stages in the the development of inaperturate pollen in the anthers of functionally female flowers ofSolanum confertiseriatum of Western Ecuador are examined. Observations on the development and morphology of inaperturate pollen in functionally female flowers ofSolanum are related to hypotheses about the evolution of dioecy in the genus.
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    Plant systematics and evolution 210 (1998), S. 87-103 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Solanum ; AFLP markers ; DNA fingerprinting ; phylogeny ; polyploids ; potato ; tomato
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Using the AFLP technique highly informative DNA fingerprints were generated from 19 taxa ofSolanum sect.Petota (potatoes) and three taxa ofSolanum sect.Lycopersicum (tomatoes). Both phenetic and cladistic analyses were conducted from the individual genotypic level to the species level. An AFLP fingerprint, using a combination of suitable AFLP primers, generated 12 to 71 scorable fragments per genotype which was sufficient for taxonomic interpretation. The classifications based on the molecular markers were generally in agreement with current taxonomic opinions. Unexpectedly,S. microdontum was associated with ser.Megistacroloba rather than with ser.Tuberosa, andS. demissum (ser.Demissa) and species of ser.Acaulia appeared closely affiliated. AFLP is an efficient and reliable technique to generate biosystematic data and therefore a promising tool for evolutionary studies.
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  • 35
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    Plant systematics and evolution 209 (1998), S. 85-91 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Capsicum ; DNA content ; genome size ; flow cytometry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Nuclei were isolated from leaf tissue of differentCapsicum species and the relative fluorescence intensity was measured by flow cytometry after propidium iodide staining.Pisum sativum nuclei with known nuclear genome size (9.07 pg) were used as internal standard to determine nuclear DNA content of the samples in absolute units. The 2C DNA contents ranged between 7.65 pg inC. annuum and 9.72 pg inC. pubescens, and the general mean of the genus was 8.42 pg. These values correspond, respectively, to 1C genome size of 3.691 (C. annuum), 4.690 (C. pubescens) and 4.063 (general mean) Mbp. In general, white-flowered species proved to have less DNA, with the exception ofC. praetermissum, which displayed a 2C DNA content of 9.23 pg. It was possible to divide the studied species into three main groups according to their DNA content, and demonstrate differences in DNA content within two of the three species complexes established on the basis of morphological traits.
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    Plant cell, tissue and organ culture 50 (1997), S. 125-129 
    ISSN: 1573-5044
    Keywords: callus ; metal tolerance ; shoot regeneration ; Solanaceae ; tobacco
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Manganese toxicity to germination, callus induction and shoot regeneration was studied on three cultivars of Nicotiana tabacum: BEL W3, Burley 21, Bright NC 944. All materials were cultured on MS solid medium containing 0.1 (control), 2, 5, 10, 15 and 20 mM Mn, to which 5 µM NAA and 5 µM kinetin were added for callus induction and shoot regeneration. Mn toxicity to callus growth was tested using habituated callus of Nicotiana bigelovii var. bigelovii grown on MS medium without growth regulators. Mn concentrations higher than 2 mM were toxic for germination, and concentrations higher than 5 mM were toxic for callus induction, shoot regeneration and callus growth. Among the cultivars examined, Bright tobacco appeared more tolerant to high Mn concentrations during callus formation and shoot regeneration. However, many regenerated plants capable of growing in vitro in the presence of 2 and 5 mM Mn were obtained.
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  • 37
    ISSN: 1573-1561
    Keywords: Macrosiphum euphorbiae ; Homoptera (Aphididae) ; Solanum tuberosum ; Solanaceae ; potato ; α-chaconine ; α-solanine ; α-tomatine ; solanidine ; tomatidine
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Macrosiphum euphorbiae, also known as the potato aphid, is a potato virus vector, associated with decreased tuber production. Feeding, toxicity, and reproductive effects of the major potato glycoalkaloids (α-chaconine and α-solanine), their common aglycone (solanidine), and a nonpotato glycoalkaloid (α-tomatine) and its aglycone (tomatidine) onM. euphorbiae were studied. As expected, neither α-chaconine nor α-solanine had a strong lethal effect on the aphid, but α-chaconine stimulated feeding at low concentrations. Both aglycones were deterrent and lethal at high concentrations and, like α-chaconine and α-tomatine, they delayed the appearance and decreased the number of nymphs.
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    Entomologia experimentalis et applicata 84 (1997), S. 137-146 
    ISSN: 1570-7458
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Lycopersicon hirsutum ; Aphididae ; Macrosiphum euphorbiae ; pink potato aphid ; resistance ; glandular trichomes ; behavior
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Accessions PI 126449 and PI 134417 of wild tomato, Lycopersicon hirsutum f. glabratum C.H. Mull, were assessed for resistance to the pink potato aphid, Macrosiphum euphorbiae (Thomas). Aphid populations under field and greenhouse conditions were significantly lower on the L. hirsutum f. glabratum plants compared to L. esculentum. Removal of trichome glands and exudates by wiping the leaf surface resulted in a dramatic decrease in aphid mortality. Compared to L. esculentum, aphid behavior on the L. hirsutum f. glabratum plants was characterized by 40 to 52% abandonment, delay in time for first probe, reduction of number and duration of probes and decrease in the total proportion of time probing. Removal of the trichomes reduced the percentage of abandonment and increased the total proportion of time probing. Density and type of glandular trichomes varied among plant lines and on adaxial and abaxial leaf surfaces within a line, particularly for the L. hirsutum f. glabratum plants. PI 134417 was, in general, more resistant to the aphids than PI 126449.
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  • 39
    ISSN: 1423-0445
    Keywords: chemical defense ; tropane alkaloids ; pyrrolizidine alkaloids ; lycopsamine ; Ithomiinae ; Placidula euryanassa ; Miraleria cymothoe ; Solanaceae ; Brugmansia suaveolens
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Larvae of the ithomiine butterflyPlacidula euryanassa sequester tropane alkaloids (TAs) from the host plantBrugmansia suaveolens and pass them through the pupae to freshly emerged adults. Wild caught adults also show in their tissues, variable amounts of pyrrolidizine alkaloids (PAs), probably sequestered from variable plant sources and subject to dynamics of incorporation, accumulation and utilization of PAs by ithomiine butterflies. The ratio TAs/PAs is also variable between different populations.Miraleria cymothoe, another ithomiine that feeds onB. suaveolens as larvae, does not sequester TAs from the host-plant, but sequesters PAs from plant sources visited by the adult butterflies. The main alkaloid found in both butterflies is lycopsamine, which also is the principal PA found in all genera of Ithomiinae.
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    Sexual plant reproduction 9 (1996), S. 357-361 
    ISSN: 1432-2145
    Keywords: Key words Self-incompatibility ; Evolution ; S-RNases ; Solanaceae ; Rosaceae ; Scrophulariaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  This review summarises current understanding of the evolution of self-incompatibility inferred from DNA sequence analysis. Self-incompatibility in many plant families is controlled by a single, highly polymorphic S-locus which, in the Solanaceae, encodes an allelic series of stylar ribonucleases known as the S-RNases. PCR approaches are a convenient way to examine the diversity of S-RNase sequences within and between wild populations of a self-incompatible species and provide a unique view into the species’ current and historic population structure. Similar molecular appoaches have also been used to show that S-RNases are involved in self-incompatibility in families other than the Solanaceae. A model for the evolution of ribonuclease-based self-incompatibility systems is discussed.
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    Sexual plant reproduction 9 (1996), S. 357-361 
    ISSN: 1432-2145
    Keywords: Self-incompatibility ; Evolution ; S-RNases ; Solanaceae ; Rosaceae ; Scrophulariaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract This review summarises current understanding of the evolution of self-incompatibility inferred from DNA sequence analysis. Self-incompatibility in many plant families is controlled by a single, highly polymorphicS-locus which, in the Solanaceae, encodes an allelic series of stylar ribonucleases known as the S-RNases. PCR approaches are a convenient way to examine the diversity of S-RNase sequences within and between wild populations of a self-incompatible species and provide a unique view into the species' current and historic population structure. Similar molecular appoaches have also been used to show that S-RNases are involved in self-incompatibility in families other than the Solanaceae. A model for the evolution of ribonuclease-based self-incompatibility systems is discussed.
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  • 42
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Nicotiana ; rDNA ; external transcribed spacer ; phylogenetic subrepeat differentiation ; molecular evolution
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract For two close diploid relatives of the allotetraploidNicotiana tabacum, N. sylvestris (subg.Petunioides) andN. tomentosiformis (subg.Nicotiana), the nucleotide sequences of the external transcribed rDNA spacer regions (ETS) are described and compared (within the genus and with otherSolanaceae). The ETS of these two diploid species consists of three regions: the most upstream region I contains the putative RNA polymerase I transcription initiation site. Region II consists of several subrepeats (type A) and of a short species specific element. There are 5 subrepeats in theN. sylvestris clone and 10 subrepeats in the clone isolated fromN. tomentosiformis. Region III, adjacent to the 18S rRNA gene, exhibits much higher similarities between species than regions I and II, not only amongN. sylvestris andN. tomentosiformis but also with more distantly relatedSolanaceae. At the 5′-end of region III of the ETS in the twoNicotiana species studied in detail there are three copies of highly divergent subrepeats (type B). Possible ways of the step-wise molecular evolution of these ribosomal DNA regions inNicotiana and theSolanaceae are discussed.
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  • 43
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    Plant systematics and evolution 202 (1996), S. 37-63 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Capsicum ; Karyosystematics ; fluorochrome banding ; heterochromatin differentiation ; karyotype evolution
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Fluorochrome chromosome banding is applied for the first time to 15 samples of five cultivatedCapsicum species, all with 2n = 24, and allows a detailed analysis of the karyotypes (Tables 2–3, Fig. 8). Banding patterns differ between cytotypes, species and groups, reflecting the dynamics of chromosomal differentiation and evolutionary divergence. Taxa have from 1 to 4 NOR-bearing satellited chromosome pairs and exhibit increasing numbers of terminal (rarely intercalary and indistinct centromeric) heterochromatic fluorescent bands. Amounts of heterochromatin (expressed in % of karyotype length) increase from the group withC. annuum (1.80–2.88),C. chinense (3.91–5.52), andC. frutescens (5.55) toC. baccatum (7.30–7.56), and finally toC. pubescens (18.95). In all taxa CMA+DAPI—(GC-rich) constitutive heterochromatin dominates, onlyC. pubescens has an additional CMAo DAPI+ (AT-rich) band. The fluorochrome bands generally (but not completely) correspond to the Giemsa C-bands. Structural heterozygosity can be demonstrated but is not prominent. The independent origin of at least three evolutionary lines leading to the cultivated taxa ofCapsicum is supported.
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  • 44
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Hybrid identification ; Molecular evolution ; Repetitive DNA elements ; Satellite DNA ; Solanaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Species-specific repetitive DNA probes are a useful tool for the molecular identification of somatic hybrids. Therefore, the distribution of three repetitive DNA elements of Solanum was investigated in Solanum wild species, Solanum breeding lines, and in more distantly related species of the genera Lycopersicon, Nicotiana, and Datura. The clone pSCH15, obtained from S. circaeifolium, represents a new 168-bp repetitive element; it shows 73–79% sequence similarity to repetitive elements of S. brevidens and Lycopersicon species. The 163-bp element in pSBH6, cloned from S. bulbocastanum, turned out to be very similar (95% sequence homology) to the Lycopersicon element pLEG15/TGRI previously regarded to be present only in species of the genus Lycopersicon and in S. lycopersicoides. Lower sequence similarity of approximately 80% was observed to repetitive elements of S. brevidens which are organized differently. The repeats exhibited different degrees of specificity: by Southern hybridization the element represented by the clone pSBH6 could be detected in almost all Solanum species investigated here but only after long exposure to X-ray film. The previously described “Solanum-specific” element represented by the clone pSA287 was also found, although in a very low copy number, in Lycopersicon esculentum. Therefore, detection of the repetitive elements pSA287 and pSBH6 in those species in which the respective repeat is less represented depends on exposure time. In contrast, the element pSCH15 is prominently present only in a small number of Solanum wild species and — to some extent — in the diploid breeding lines as revealed after long exposure. Use of these repeated elements for the identification of specific genomes in protoplast-fusion hybrids between Solanum wild species and Solanum breeding lines, or between two breeding lines, was evaluated.
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  • 45
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    Euphytica 86 (1995), S. 5-13 
    ISSN: 1573-5060
    Keywords: Solanum macrocarpon ; Solanum linnaeanum ; cytology ; eggplant ; hybridization ; inheritance ; Solanaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Crossing experiments involving the various groups of Solanum macrocarpon L. complex, including wild (dasyphyllum), semi-wild and cultivars produced fully fertile F1 and F2 hybrids. This confirmed earlier findings that these groups belong to the same biological species. S. macrocarpon complex and S. linnaeanum Hepper ex Jaeger are isolated by reproductive barriers. F1 and F2 hybrids between various groups of S. macrocarpon showed heterosis. F2 superior hybrids were isolated as candidates for the future breeding programmes. Most wild-type traits like prickliness, hairiness were dominant to those possessed by cultivars. Relatively resistant hybrids to pest attack were noted. S. macrocarpon complex and S. linnaeanum are diploids (2n=24). The overall nature of the karyotype suggests that the two are related. The F1 hybrids between the cultivars of S. macrocarpon and the wild group (S. dasyphyllum) showed normal meiosis. A lack of isolating barriers confirmed that S. macrocarpon complex constitute a single biological species.
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  • 46
    ISSN: 1573-5028
    Keywords: abscisic acid ; cDNA sequence ; organ-specific expression ; Solanaceae ; water stress
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A rich source of valuable genes are wild species. Solanum chacoense Bitter with its extreme resistance to viruses, insects and drought, is a good example. In the present study, a stress gene, designated DS2, has been isolated from S. chacoense. We have shown that the expression of the gene is organ-specific being detected in leaf, stem and stolon, but not in root, tuber or flower. Treatment of detached leaves with abscisic acid (ABA), salicylic acid or methyl jasmonate resulted in only very moderate accumulation of DS2 mRNA. Thus, DS2 represents a very rare type of the water-stress-inducible genes whose signalling pathway is not primarily related to ABA. Based on DNA sequence analysis, DS2 encodes a putative protein starting with 20 amino acids homologous to the ABA- and water-stress-inducible, ripening-related (ASR) proteins of tomato continued by an insert of 155 amino acids structurally similar to certain LEAs (late embryogenesis-abundant proteins) and ending in 88 amino acids homologous again to the ASR sequences and to an unpublished partial cDNA fragment isolated from the root of rice. The N-terminal region of the DS2 protein is hydrophilic with ten 13-mer amino acid motifs and random coil structure. In contrast, the C-terminus predicts an α-helix and possesses a bipartite nuclear targeting sequence motif. These data suggest that the function of the DS2 may be the protection of the nuclear DNA from desiccation.
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  • 47
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    Plant systematics and evolution 194 (1995), S. 207-230 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Floral mechanism ; pollination ; anther structure and function
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract SinceDelpino (1869),Juel (1894, 1911), andMüller (inMöller 1921: 164), the flowers ofSolanaceae have received little attention with regard to function and pollination syndromes. The present paper deals with representatives of 6 of the 9 known salpiglossidean genera. Previous observations are updated and discussed at the tribal level. Most species studied are butterfly- or moth-pollinated. With the exception ofSalpiglossis, the fertile floral parts are concealed in the corolla tube, and their arrangement is specially suited for deposit of the pollen on the lepidopteran tongue. Particularly notable are (a) abundant stigmatic secretion that makes the pollen sticky, and (b) versatile anthers that optimize contact between the tongue and the thecae.Brunfelsia andBrowallia exhibit a mechanism analogous to that ofApocynaceae, however, with two entrances instead of five. When the tongue is inserted, it is forced to contact the stigma and becomes glued with its secretion. When the tongue is pulled out, it touches the anthers and causes slight balancing movement. InStreptosolen, very probably an ornithophilous descendant of theBrowallia stock, the mechanism is much simplified.Leptoglossis andHunzikeria bear a novel device for pollen deposition: there are two fertile wheel-like anthers that are capable of full rotation up to eight turns.
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  • 48
    ISSN: 1871-4528
    Keywords: Solanum tuberosum L ; cv. Bintje ; Solanaceae ; monoterpene ; (R)-(−)-carvone ; (S)-(+)-carvone
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary The monoterpenes (R)-(−)-carvone and (S)-(+)-carvone inhibited sprout growth in a model system consisting of sprouts growing from potato eye pieces. The sprout tissue was not necrotic after carvone treatment and the inhibition was reversible, since after treatment the sprouts showed regrowth either by continued top growth or by branching. However, the effect of both isomers on sprout growth differed, and (S)-(+)-carvone inhibited the elongation of the sprouts sooner than did (R)-(−)-carvone. This might be explained by a faster uptake of the former, since the concentration of (S)-(+)-carvone and its derivatives was twice as high during the first 4 days compared with (R)-(−)-carvone-treated sprouts. The sprouts were able to reduce (R)-(−)-carvone mainly into neodihydrocarveol, and (S)-(+)-carvone into neoisodihydrocarveol; in addition hydroxylated compounds were also detected.
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  • 49
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Cell wall ; Endochitinase ; Solanaceae ; Style ; Transmitting tract
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract An abundant, pistil-specific basic protein has been purified and characterized from potato (Solanum tuberosum L.). A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) probe was generated for the corresponding gene using oligonucleotides based on internal peptide sequences of the protein, and the PCR probe was further employed to isolate cDNA and genomic clones. The sequence of the gene exhibits up to 70% similarity to previously described endochitinase class 1a protein sequences, and the purified protein possesses chitinase {poly[1, 4-(N-acetyl-β-D-glucosaminide)] glucanohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.14} activity. The protein, termed SK2, has been located by immunocytochemistry to the intercellular matrix of the stylar transmitting tract. Immunoblot analysis has shown SK2 to be distinct from the wound-induced chitinases of potato. The SK2-class of chitinase is restricted in its distribution within the Solanaceae to the sub-family Solanoidae, which includes cultivated tomato and potato species. It was absent from the Cestroidae species tested (Petunia hybrida, Nicotiana tabacum). A role for SK2 endochitinase in protecting the ovary against pollen-tubemediated pathogen ingress is proposed.
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  • 50
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Cell wall ; Endochitinase ; Solanaceae ; Style ; Transmitting tract
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract An abundant, pistil-specific basic protein has been purified and characterized from potato (Solanum tuberosum L.). A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) probe was generated for the corresponding gene using oligonucleotides based on internal peptide sequences of the protein, and the PCR probe was further employed to isolate cDNA and genomic clones. The sequence of the gene exhibits up to 70% similarity to previously described endochitinase class 1a protein sequences, and the purified protein possesses chitinase {poly[1, 4-(N-acetyl-β-D-glucosaminide)] glucanohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.14} activity. The protein, termed SK2, has been located by immunocytochemistry to the intercellular matrix of the stylar transmitting tract. Immunoblot analysis has shown SK2 to be distinct from the wound-induced chitinases of potato. The SK2-class of chitinase is restricted in its distribution within the Solanaceae to the sub-family Solanoidae, which includes cultivated tomato and potato species. It was absent from the Cestroidae species tested (Petunia hybrida, Nicotiana tabacum). A role for SK2 endochitinase in protecting the ovary against pollen-tubemediated pathogen ingress is proposed.
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  • 51
    ISSN: 1432-2145
    Keywords: Polymerase chain reaction ; Self-incompatibility ; Solanaceae ; Ribonuclease
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) has been used to clone two S-alleles (S13 and S14) from Solanum chacoense. The two alleles do not cross-hybridize on genomic Southern blots or on northern blots using stylar RNA. Although the S14 message was not detected in a stylar cDNA library prepared from mature flowers, a full-length copy of the S13 coding sequence was isolated by screening with the PCR fragment. We have analysed the sequences of the S13 cDNA and the S14 PCR fragment (60% of the mature protein coding sequence) in the context of S-RNase evolution, and propose that random point mutations may be sufficient to generate new S-alleles. Based on a phylogenetic tree composed of RNase sequences containing the conserved RNase motifs HGLWP and KHGXC, we suggest that gametophytic self-incompatibility genes are RNase genes that have acquired a new function in the gametophytic self-incompatibility system early in the evolution of flowering plants.
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  • 52
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    Entomologia experimentalis et applicata 70 (1994), S. 217-225 
    ISSN: 1570-7458
    Keywords: Coleoptera ; Chrysomelidae ; Leptinotarsa decemlineata ; Colorado potato beetle ; Solanaceae ; Solanum berthaultii ; plant resistance ; glandular trichomes ; host preference ; behavior
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Choice and no-choice studies were conducted to determine how the glandular trichomes of the wild potato,Solanum berthaultii Hawkes, affect host preference of the Colorado potato beetle,Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say). Given a feeding choice betweenS. tuberosum andS. berthaultii, larvae and adults preferred the foliage ofS. tuberosum, but adults were more discriminating. When foliage ofS. berthaultii was appressed toS. tuberosum leaflets, fewer adults fed on the appressed leaflets. When given a choice between ‘trichome-intact’ and ‘trichome-removed’S. berthaultii foliage, adults preferred to feed on the latter. The preference for ‘trichome-removed’ foliage and the percent of adults initiating feeding, increased with the degree of trichome removal. These studies provide evidence that the resistance ofS. berthaultii is associated with feeding deterrents localized in the glandular trichomes, thatS. berthaultii possesses more than one mechanism of resistance to the Colorado potato beetle, and that the expression of resistance is dependent on the developmental stage of the insect.
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  • 53
    ISSN: 1570-7458
    Keywords: Coleoptera ; Chrysomelidae ; Leptinotarsa decemlineata ; Colorado potato beetle ; Solanaceae ; Solanum berthaultii ; potato ; plant resistance ; selection ; adaptation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Thirty cohorts of the Colorado potato beetle (CPB) were reared for ten consecutive generations on the cultivated potato,Solanum tuberosum, and on two accessions (PI 473331 and PI 473334) of the resistant wild species,S. berthaultii. At each generation, selection was imposed for increased survival, decreased development time, and for increased fecundity. Although several parameters responded to selection, net replacement rate (R0) onS. berthaultii was consistently less than 1/3 that on cultivated potato. At the tenth generation, eachS. tuberosum strain female replaced herself with 110 daughters, whereas females from strains reared on PI 473334 and PI 473331 produced an average of 30 and 7 daughters, respectively. Slopes of the R0 regression lines for populations reared onS. tuberosum andS. berthaultii did not differ from zero, indicating no significant response to selection. Our findings suggest that populations of the Colorado potato beetle may have genetic variability in some performance traits for adaptation toS. berthaultii, but that adaptation is unlikely to occur as rapidly as previously reported.
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  • 54
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    Euphytica 79 (1994), S. 181-186 
    ISSN: 1573-5060
    Keywords: Database ; Solanaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Biological investigations have the potential to produce large volumes of data, much of which is condensed or omitted from publications, and which may not be readily accessible to researchers outside that discipline. Bringing together in a single repository information whose common thread is the Solanaceae family gives researchers a valuable, multidisciplinary tool. The SolGenes (Solanaceae) database project, a part of the USDA Plant Genome Research Program, is meant to be such a tool. The database has facilities for handling genetic and physical maps, DNA sequences, pathologies and germplasm stocks, as well as other types of information. It currently contains tomato, potato and pepper genetic maps based on a common set of probes, tomato germplasm data including wild species and stocks, autoradiogram images of distributed probes and much more. Current efforts are focused on loading images of tomato mutants, expanding the germplasm data, and setting up a gopher server. The database software (ACEDB) provides a user-friendly, graphical interface with links between logically related pieces of information, allowing the user to view data from multiple sources with just a few clicks of the mouse. The database and software are freely available to interested parties.
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  • 55
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    Journal of chemical ecology 20 (1994), S. 2345-2371 
    ISSN: 1573-1561
    Keywords: Fire ; smoke ; germination cues ; Nicotiana attenuata ; Solanaceae ; seed dormancy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Some postfire annuals with dormant seeds use heat or chemical cues from charred wood to synchronize their germination with the postfire environment. We report that wood smoke and polar extracts of wood smoke, but not the ash of burned wood, contain potent cue(s) that stimulate germination in the postfire annual plant,Nicotiana attenuata. We examined the responses of seeds from six populations of plants from southwest Utah to extracts of smoke and found the proportion of viable seeds that germinated in the presence of smoke cues to vary between populations but to be consistent between generations. With the most dormant genotypes, we examine three mechanisms by which smoke-derived chemical cues may stimulate germination (chemical scarification of the seed coat and nutritive- and signal-mediated stimulation of germination) and report that the response is consistent with the signal-mediated mechanism. The germination cue(s) found in smoke are produced by the burning of hay, hardwood branches, leaves, and, to a lesser degree, cellulose. Moreover, the cues are found in the common food condiment, “liquid smoke,” and we find no significant differences between brands. With a bioassay-driven fractionation of liquid smoke, we identified 71 compounds in active fractions by GC-MS and AA spectrometry. However, when these compounds were tested in pure form or in combinations that mimicked the composition of active fractions over a range of concentrations, they failed to stimulate germination to the same degree that smoke fractions did. Moreover, enzymatic oxidation of some of these compounds also failed to stimulate germination. In addition, we tested 43 additional compounds also reported from smoke, 85 compounds that were structurally similar to those reported from smoke and 34 compounds reported to influence germination in other species. Of the 233 compounds tested, 16 proved to inhibit germination at the concentrations tested, and none reproduced the activity of wood smoke. By thermally desorbing smoke produced by cellulose combustions that was trapped on Chromosorb 101, we demonstrate that the cue is desorbed between 125 and 150°C. We estimate that the germination cues are active at concentrations of less than 1 pg/seed and, due to their chromatographic behavior, infer that a number of different chemical structures are active. In separate experiments, we demonstrate that cues remain active for at least 53 days in soil under greenhouse conditions and that the application of aqucous extracts of smoke to soil containing seeds results in dramatic increases in germination of artificial seed banks. Hence, although the chemical nature of the germination cue remains elusive, the stability of the germination cues, their water-solubility, and their activity in low concentrations suggest that these cues could serve as powerful tools for the examination of dormant seed banks and the selective factors thought to be important in the evolution of postfire plant communities.
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  • 56
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    Plant systematics and evolution 193 (1994), S. 153-172 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Exodeconus ; Nicandra ; Taxonomy ; phylogeny ; hybridization
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The small genusExodeconus Rafinesque (Solanaceae) from Ecuador and Peru is revised for the first time. Six species are recognised. Key, descriptions, lectotypifications, illustrations, and distribution maps are provided. The new combinationExodeconus integrifolius (Philippi)Axelius is made. A hypothesis of the phylogenetic relationships within the genus, based on parsimony analyses of morphological data, is presented in form of a cladogram. A method to reveal hybrids by comparing their placement in cladograms based on morphological or on chloroplast DNA data, respectively, is presented. In light of this, a hypothesis of a hybrid origin ofExodeconus, or of the related genusNicandra Adanson, is discussed.
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  • 57
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    Genetic resources and crop evolution 41 (1994), S. 123-124 
    ISSN: 1573-5109
    Keywords: syteny ; homologous series ; variation ; Solanaceae ; Gramineae ; Vavilov
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Synteny, the co-linear arrangement of genes in related taxa, shows parallelity to Vavilov's law of homologous series and possibly provides a molecular approach for the explanation of this law.
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  • 58
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Clutch size ; Competition ; Butterfly ; Ithomiinae ; Solanaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Females of Mechanitis lysimnia (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) show a characteristic searching, inspecting and evaluating behavior on their Solanum host plants. The average egg-clutch size for this butterfly varied with the host species of Solanum. There was a positive relationship between the egg-clutch size of M. lysimnia and the number of leaves, indicating an adjustment between the reproductive effort of the insect and the amount of food available to its offspring. Field experiments showed that butterflies were able to recognize conspecific egg-clusters by visual cues and preferred to lay eggs on egg-free host plants. On large plants that received two or more egg-clusters, later clutches contained fewer eggs than the first one. The butterflies seem to evaluate the amount of food by inspecting the quantity of leaves and by checking for presence or absence of eggs and, possibly, caterpillars before deciding if and how many eggs to lay. These behavioral mechanisms should be important in reducing direct intraspecific competition for the five rare, small and ephemeral host plant species used by this insect.
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  • 59
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    Oecologia 94 (1993), S. 534-541 
    ISSN: 1432-1939
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Nicotiana sylvestris ; Nicotiana glauca ; Datura stramonium ; Lycopersicon esculentum
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We quantified the accumulation of and tolerance to exogenously-fed nicotine by monitoring photosynthetic capacity and growth in two nicotine producing species of Solanaceous plants (Nicotiana sylvestris andN. glauca) as well as two Solanaceous species (Datura stramonium andLycopersicon esculentum) that do not produce nicotine to examine the relationship between tolerence and the ability to produce nicotine in defensive quantities. SinceN. sylvestris uses nicotine as an inducible defense, we examined whether nicotine tolerance is induced by damage to examine further the relationship between nicotine tolerence and synthesis. All species were grown in a 1 mM nicotine-containing hydroponic solution. Reductions in the photosynthetic capacity of nicotine-fed plants were found in all species tested. Nicotine-producing species showed no greater tolerance as measured by photosynthetic capacity than the two non-producing species. Leaf damage marginally increased the tolerence ofN. sylvestris to exogeneouslyfed nicotine suggesting that photosynthetic tolerance is coordinated with nicotine production in this nicotine-producing species.N. glauca plants regained photosynthetic capacity after their accumulated nicotine was demethylated to form nornicotine. Leaf nicotine pools in the other three species did not decrease, suggesting that for these species alkaloid metabolism does not play a major role in tolerance. Tolerance, as measured by biomass gained, was higher in the two non-producing species than in the nicotine-producing species suggesting that nicotine may also be functioning as a growth regulator. These results do not support the hypothesis that tolerance is as important as biosynthetic ability in determining which species accumulate defensively significant quantities of nicotine.
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  • 60
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Repeated DNA ; Restriction satellite ; RFLP ; Solanaceae ; Species-specificity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Highly repeated DNA of potato (Solanum sp.) was characterized by cloning various major repeated elements of the nuclear genome. The percentage of the nuclear genome of the specific fractions and the restriction enzyme patterns were determined in order to show the distribution and organization of the respective repeats in the genome of Solanum tuberosum cultivars, dihaploid breeding lines and in wild species of Solanum. Several of the clones obtained were represented in a high copy number but showed no informative RFLP patterns. More information was gained from ‘restriction satellite’ repeats. The clone pR1T320 was found to contain satellite repeats (360 bp in length) that are proportionally present in the genome of all Solanum species at frequencies, between 0.5% and 2.6% and which are differently organized. This repeat was also found in the genera Lycopersicon, Datura and Nicotiana. With various restriction enzymes characteristic RFLP patterns were detected. A more or less genus-specific element for Solanum was the 183-bp repeat (clone pSA287; between 0.2–0.4% of the nuclear genome) that was present in the majority of the Solanum species analyzed except S. kurtzianum, S. bulbocastanum and S. pinnatisectum. In a few wild species (prominently in S. kurtzianum, S. demissum and S. acaule) a specific repeat type was detected (clone pSDT382; repeat length approximately 370 bp) that could be used to trace the wild species introduced into S. tuberosum cultivars. The repeats analyzed together with the 18S, 5.8S and 25S ribosomal DNA (1.9–5.2%, corresponding to 1800-5500 rDNA copies) comprised approximately 4–7% of the Solanum genome.
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  • 61
    ISSN: 1570-7458
    Keywords: Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say ; Colorado potato beetle ; population differences ; food-related behaviour ; Solanaceae ; geographic populations
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Some components of the food-related behaviour (biting, feeding, walking on the plant or walking elsewhere, and resting) of two North American and three European Colorado potato beetle (CPB) populations, on six solanaceous plant species were monitored with the help of a microcomputer-based program, testing the hypothesis whether populations showed differences at the behavioural level to alternative host plants (S. melongena, S. dulcamara, andLycopersicon esculentum), as well as to non-host plants occasionally encountered (S. luteum, S. nigrum.). The few significant differences found were among populations of the same continent in 1) the number of activities monitored, 2) the duration of feeding periods, 3) the number of bites taken to the onset of feeding, 4) the ‘amount of behavioural plasticity’, and 5) the ‘behavioural diversity’. On the basis of two-way ANOVA analyses, no plant-by-population interactions were detected indicating that the CPB populations studied did not have specific relationships with any of the plant species tested. The lack of substantial differences in food-related behaviour was unexpected since considerable isolation in space and time exists between the populations occurring on the two continents.
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  • 62
    ISSN: 1573-8248
    Keywords: Field biology ; life cycle ; Chrysomelidae ; Solanaceae ; biocontrol
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Field observations on the biology ofMetriona elatior (Col.: Chrysomelidae) onSolanum elaeagnifolium (Solanaceae) from Uruguay. Specimens ofMetriona elatior were found feeding on leaves of the silverleaf nightshade,Solanum elaeagnifolium, from the eastern of Uruguay since 1984. According to a field study the young leaves were skeletonized since spring to early autumn by larvae and adults. Oothecae and pupae were found mainly on old leaves. The egg mean volume was of 0.614 mm3. Young plants of the weed were always killed after massive natural infections ofM. elatior. Therefore, this tortoise leaf-beetle may be studied as a potential biocontrol agent on populations ofS. elaeagnifolium.
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  • 63
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    Plant systematics and evolution 185 (1993), S. 133-151 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Cestrum ; Cold-sensitive regions ; heterochromatin ; chromosome banding ; silver impregnation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Cold-induced mitotic under-condensation of certain chromosome segments is a rare phenomenon in plants. There are about 11 genera of monocotyledons and only 3 of dicotyledons, where species are known to have such cold-sensitive regions (CSRs). The molecular causes of cold-induced undercondensation are not clear, and no consistent cytochemical characteristics of CSRs are known. Recently we have presented a chromosome banding analysis on CSRs and their relation to constitutive heterochromatin inCestrum parqui (Solanaceae), a species of sect.Cestrum. The present study is concerned with a similar analysis inC. strigillatum of sect.Cestrum, and inC. fasciculatum andC. elegans of sect.Habrothamnus. Chromomycin/DAPI fluorescent double staining, sequential C-banding, and sequential silver impregnation were applied. The species differ in detail but are similar qualitatively. Four classes of heterochromatin can be discriminated. (1) CSRs, with banding properties indicating AT-rich constitutive heterochromatin. After cold-treatment CSR heterochromatin can be silver-impregnated from interphase, as chromocentres, to metaphase, as undercondensed segments. CSRs are subject to frequent heteromorphy. (2) Nucleolar organizers. Two pairs were identified in the karyotypes. Banding properties indicate GC-rich heterochromatin. The nucleolar organizing regions are less evident and their silver-reducing capability reduces during metaphase. (3) Non-nucleolar CMA-positively fluorescing bands. These are minute, polymorphic, positively C-stained, and restricted to one or a few sites in the karyotypes. (4) Indifferently fluorescing, positively C-stained bands. They occur on centromeres, some chromosome ends, and clustered over the chromosome arms. They are mostly very delicate and do not resist harsh banding treatments. — The species investigated here andC. parqui resemble each other qualitatively in heterochromatin classes (1), (2), and (3), but differ much in banding properties of class (4). Therefore, heterochromatin characteristics in the genus are not so uniform as the present results inC. strigillatum, C. fasciculatum, andC. elegans appear to show.
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  • 64
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    Plant systematics and evolution 185 (1993), S. 189-205 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Normania nava ; N. triphylla ; Solanum nava ; S. trisectum ; Triguera osbeckii ; Taxonomy ; palynology ; seed morphology ; endangered species ; Macaronesian flora
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Morphological data and results from scanning electron microscopy of seeds and pollen show thatNormania Lowe [syn.Solanum L. subg.Potatoe (G. Don)D'Arcy sect.Normania (Lowe)Bitter] (Solanaceae: Solaneae) should be considered as a distinct genus fromSolanum L. It has two species, one restricted to the island of Madeira [Normania triphylla (Lowe)Lowe] and the other to Tenerife and Gran Canaria [Normania nava (Webb & Berthel.)Franc.-Ort. & R. N. Lester]. These species are extremely rare and had not been found for about 100 years, untilN. nava was rediscovered in two different localities in Tenerife in 1973 and 1982.Normania triphylla was reported in two different places from northern Madeira in 1991. Both species have the highest conservation priority in the Macaronesian region.
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  • 65
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Cyphomandra ; Pollination ; perfume syndrome ; floral fragrance ; anther anatomy ; euglossine bees
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The perfume syndrome and pollination by fragrance-collecting euglossine bees in the neotropic solanaceous genusCyphomandra was confirmed by field observations. In SE Brazil,C. sciadostylis was visited byEufriesea violaceae, andC. diploconos byEuglossa mandibularis; C. hartwegii was pollinated byEulaema meriana in Costa Rica. The primary attractant, fragrant droplets that ooze from the dorsally bulged connectives, is mopped up by the males with the forebasitarsi. Thereby, the poricidal thecae are inadvertently pushed causing the dry pollen to dust the bee's sternum. The number and direction of the pollen jets are related to pollinator size and stigma structure. The flowers are homogamous, selfsterile, and last three days. The androecium is optically non-contrasting or has cryptic colour. Flowers ofC. sciadostylis andC. diploconos undergo a colour change and an almost three-fold increase in corolla size when scent production and visits cease. The dorsal papillar epidermis of the connective is underlain by a glandular parenchyma typical of osmophores. GC techniques revealed germacrene D as the main component in the mentholic scent ofC. sciadostylis, ipsdienol, heneicosane, and tricosane as dominant in the nutmeg-like scent ofC. diploconos, and benzyl acetate and benzyl alcohol in the sweet fragrance ofC. hartwegii. In all cases, these were accompanied by numerous minor components of heterogeneous chemical nature.—Pollen release by means of a peculiar pneumatic bellows mechanism appears as a necessary and probably ubiquitous feature ofCyphomandra. Even a slight pressure exerted upon the thin, elastic thecal walls blows pollen jets through the pores. Unusual anatomic changes accompany anther maturation. Initially voluminous parenchymatic locular intumescences (placentoids) contract completely during meiosis, then expand once more when the pollen is ripe, pushing the grains against the locular wall, and contract a second time, allowing air to enter the thecae.—Cyphomandra pinetorum was found to be exceptional in exhibiting a pollen flower syndrome, and not cryptical but optically contrasting yellow anthers, as known forSolanum.
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  • 66
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    Plant systematics and evolution 185 (1993), S. 259-273 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Cestrum aurantiacum ; Cold-sensitive regions ; heterochromatin ; chromosome banding ; silver impregnation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The karyotype ofCestrum aurantiacum was analyzed for the presence of coldsensitive regions (CSRs) and other types of constitutive heterochromatin. A range of techniques was employed including the fluorescent DAPI, chromomycin/DAPI double staining and actinomycin D/DAPI counter-staining, and the non-fluorescent C-banding applied as single or sequential staining, sequential N-banding and silver impregnation. Four classes of constitutive heterochromatin were recognized: CSRs, nucleolar organizers, non-nucleolar chromomycin-positive bands, and indifferently fluorescent bands. The banded karyotype ofC. aurantiacum is compared with those of otherCestrum species. The sectionsHabrothamnus andCestrum are not karyologically distinct.
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  • 67
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    Plant systematics and evolution 186 (1993), S. 213-229 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Capsicum ; Karyosystematics ; Giemsa C-banding ; heterochromatin ; karyotype evolution
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Giemsa C-banding is applied for the first time inCapsicum, allowing preliminary karyotype differentiation of six diploid species. Comparison of interphase nuclei and heterochromatic C-bands reveals striking differences between taxa and contributes to their taxonomic grouping. Therefore, C-banding appears to be a powerful tool for the cytogenetics and karyosystematics of the genus. Banding patterns are characterized by the omnipresence of centromeric bands and a variable number of smaller to larger distal bands, with the addition of intercalary bands in some cases. Satellites are always C-positive. Relationships between species and possible trends of karyotype evolution are discussed, with special reference to the origin of x = 13 from x = 12 and the increase of heterochromatin, regarded as advanced features.
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  • 68
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    Mycorrhiza 1 (1992), S. 163-167 
    ISSN: 1432-1890
    Keywords: Vesicularar-buscular mycorrhizae ; Caryophyllaceae ; Solanaceae ; Responsiveness ; Succession
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary To determine if annual and perennial species from weakly mycotrophic families exhibit the same differential patterns of responsiveness to vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizae (VAM) as do members of the strongly mycotrophic grass family (Poaceae), this study examined the responses of congeneric, sympatric annual and perennials species from the Caryophyllaceae and Solanaceae to inoculation with the VAM fungus Glomus intraradices. The perennial Solanum carolinense responded as positively to G. intraradices as did perennial grasses. The other perennials examined, Solanum dulcamara and Silene nivea, were both relatively unresponsive to VAM inoculation and had mean responsiveness values below the typical level for annuals from strongly mycotrophic families. The annual Solanum nigrum exhibited a small positive response to inoculation, and was as responsive as many annuals from more mycotrophic families, especially at low P supply rates. The annual Silene noctiflora was strongly inhibited by inoculation. Mortality over 8 weeks was fivefold higher in VAM-inoculated Silene noctiflora than in uninoculated plants. Among the four herbaceous species examined, the species which persists longest in old-field succession in eastern North America was also the most responsive to VAM inoculation. Mechanisms are proposed for successional persistence and replacement based on VAM responsiveness and soil nutrient pool sizes.
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  • 69
    ISSN: 1573-5028
    Keywords: cDNA sequence ; gene expression ; glutamine synthetase ; phytochrome ; Solanaceae
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A full-length cDNA encoding glutamine synthetase (GS) was cloned from a λgt10 library of tobacco leaf RNA, and the nucleotide sequence was determined. An open reading frame accounting for a primary translation product consisting of 432 amino acids has been localized on the cDNA. The calculated molecular mass of the encoded protein is 47.2 kDa. The predicted amino acid sequence of this precursor shows higher homology to GS-2 protein sequences from other species than to a leaf GS-1 polypeptide sequence, indicating that the cDNA isolated encodes the chloroplastic isoform (GS-2) of tobacco GS. The presence of C-and N-terminal extensions which are characteristic of GS-2 proteins supports this conclusion. Genomic Southern blot analysis indicated that GS-2 is encoded by a single gene in the diploid genomes of both tomato and Nicotiana sylvestris, while two GS-2 genes are very likely present in the amphidiploid tobacco genome. Western blot analysis indicated that in etiolated and in green tomato cotyledons GS-2 subunits are represented by polypeptides of similar size, while in green tomato leaves an additional GS-2 polypeptide of higher apparent molecular weight is detectable. In contrast, tobacco GS-2 is composed of subunits of identical size in all organs examined. GS-2 transcripts and GS-2 proteins could be detected at high levels in the leaves of both tobacco or tomato. Lower amounts of GS-2 mRNA were detected in stems, corolla, and roots of tomato, but not in non-green organs of tobacco. The GS-2 transcript abundance exhibited a diurnal fluctuation in tomato leaves but not in tobacco leaves. White or red light stimulated the accumulation of GS-2 transcripts and GS-2 protein in etiolated tomato cotyledons. Far-red light cancelled this stimulation. The red light response of the GS-2 gene was reduced in etiolated seedlings of the phytochrome-deficient aurea mutant of tomato. These results indicate a phytochrome-mediated light stimulation of GS-2 gene expression during greening in tomato.
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  • 70
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    Plant systematics and evolution 182 (1992), S. 239-252 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Solanum sect.Petota ; Solanum microdontum ; Potatoes ; subspecies ; systematics ; varieties
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Current taxonomic interpretations ofSolanum microdontum Bitter partition the species into two or three infraspecific taxa, variously recognized as subspecies or varieties. The present study reexamines these taxa using morphological data from four individuals each of 69 accessions from most of the range of the species, planted in a common field plot. Our results show that the character states used to recognize infraspecific taxa inS. microdontum often vary within accessions and have no correlation with geography. We conclude that past hypotheses have used typological concepts and that infraspecific taxa are not warranted. This study questions other hypotheses of infraspecific taxa in sect.Petota.
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    Sexual plant reproduction 4 (1991), S. 81-87 
    ISSN: 1432-2145
    Keywords: Self-incompatibility ; Solanaceae ; S-allele-associated proteins ; Ribonucleases
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary We present a sequence comparison of 12 S-allele-associated proteins from three solanaceous species with gametophytic self-incompatibility: Nicotiana alata, Petunia inflata, and Solanum chacoense. The allelic variants of the S-protein exhibit a very high degree of sequence diversity consistent with their function as recognition molecules. We identify 41 perfectly conserved residues, 18 of which are also conserved in two fungal ribonucleases, RNase T2 and RNase Rh. The residues conserved in both the S-proteins and the ribonucleases include two histidines essential for catalysis, four cysteines involved in disulfide bridges, and hydrophobic residues probably involved in the core structure of the proteins. This conservation between the two ribonucleases and the 12 divergent S-proteins confirms the previously recognized similarity between 3 more closely related N. alata S-proteins and these ribonucleases, and argues strongly for the functional importance of the ribonuclease activity of the S-protein in self-incompatibility. We also identify the 19 most variable residues, which are the prime candidates for the S-allele-specificity determinant. Twelve of these nineteen residues are clustered in two regions of hypervariability, designated HVa and HVb, which are also the most prominent hydrophilic regions of the S-protein. We suggest that these two regions might form parts of the putative pollen recognition site. Identification of these structural features forms a foundation for the study of the molecular basis of self-recognition and the biochemical mechanism of inhibition of self-pollen tube growth.
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  • 72
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    Plant systematics and evolution 174 (1991), S. 17-35 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Angiosperms ; Solanaceae ; Nierembergia ; Tapinotaspis ; Centris ; Lanthanomelissa ; Paratetrapedia ; Pollination biology ; oil-flowers
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A morphological and anatomical description of the floral syndrome ofNierembergia is given, including a survey of the presence of elaiophores in most of its species, chromatography of the floral oils and observations on the pollinator behaviour. The principal pollinators areTapinotaspis spp. includingT. chalybaea which is endowed with oil collectors on the middle legs. Other exomalopsines (Lanthanomelissa andParatetrapedia) and centridines (Centris) also visitNierembergia for pollen and oil. Based on these observations and on a morphological study of the fertile parts, different pollination modes are recognized and the biogeography and evolution of the genus is discussed.
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  • 73
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Transposable element ; Potato ; Solanaceae ; Tst1
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The molecular cloning and nucleotide sequence of elements from potato and pepper that are related to the recently identified Tst1 element are described. Sequence analysis reveals considerable conservation of sequences internal to both the Tst1 element and two of the related elements identified here. In six potato clones analysed, the II by inverted repeat first identified in the Tst1 element is conserved. Several of the elements are flanked by an 8 by direct repeat. DNA fragments which were amplified from several pepper genomes by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification using the inverted repeat as sequence primers also display considerable conservation of sequences internal to the Tst1 element. These data further support the possibility that Tst1 is a non-autonomous transposable element and that Tst1 might be the first example of a transposable element which occurs in several genera of solanaceous plants.
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  • 74
    ISSN: 1423-0445
    Keywords: variation of secondary substances ; pharmacophagy ; pyrrolizidine alkaloids ; Lepidoptera ; Ithomiinae ; Aeria olena ; Tithorea harmonia ; Mechanitis polymnia ; Apocynaceae-Echitoideae ; Solanaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary The primitive, Apocynaceae-feeding Ithomiine,Tithorea harmonia, incorporates dehydropyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) from its larval foodplant (Prestonia acutifolia), rarely visiting PA sources pharmacophagously in the adult; females show higher concentrations of PAs than males, with similar variance. The close relativeAeria olena (feeding onP. coalita, without PAs) shows similar PA concentrations in both sexes and greater variation in males, like more advanced Solanaceae-feeding Ithomiine such asMechanitis polymnia, which likeA. olena obtain PAs by pharmacophagy in the adult (mainly males). This difference is due to the dynamics of PA incorporation in these species. Little variation in PA content was found among allopatric populations of the same species, but variation in available PA sources in different months was correlated with different average storage levels in the butterflies.
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  • 75
    ISSN: 1423-0445
    Keywords: induced defence ; herbivory ; leaf damage ; mollusc feeding ; tropane alkaloids ; Solanaceae ; Atropa acuminata
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Measurement of tropane alkaloid content in leaves ofAtropa acuminata after mechanical damage showed a maximum increase to 153% of the control 8 days later. There were no changes in the root or stem after similar damage. The plant responded to repeated mechanical damage by doubling its alkaloid content at 11 days after the initial wounding. But on further treatments, there was a slight decrease in alkaloid content with time. Mollusc feeding produced an increase of 164% in alkaloid content after 4 days. These results indicate that induced defence systems in angiosperms can vary considerably from plant species to plant species and that the effects of mechanical damage may differ in different parts of the same plant.
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    Theoretical and applied genetics 80 (1990), S. 113-120 
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Immunology ; Peroxidase isoenzymes ; Petunia ; Solanaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary A highly specific rabbit antiserum raised against peroxidase (PRXa) from petunia (Petunia hybrida) was used to investigate the antigenic relatedness of peroxidases in the Solanaceae. After SDS-PAGE of crude leaf extracts from a large number of species of this family, immunoblotting revealed that cross-reacting protein bands were present in all species tested. In order to determine whether these protein bands represent peroxidases, the peroxidase isoenzymes in thorn apple (Datura stramonium L.), tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.), sweet pepper (Capsicum annuum L.), potato (Solanum tuberosum L.), and tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.) were further analyzed. Immunoblots obtained after native PAGE revealed that the antiserum only recognized fast-moving peroxidase isoenzymes that are localized in the apoplast. Despite their serological relatedness, these peroxidases differed with respect to heat stability and apparent molecular weight. Differences in avidity for the petunia PRXa antiserum were suggested by immunoprecipitation with antibodies bound to protein A-Sepharose. The antiserum did not react with peroxidases from horseradish (Armoracea rusticana Gaertn., Mey and Scherb), turnip (Brassica napus L.), African marigold (Tagetes cresta L.), maize (Zea mays L.), and oats (Avena sativa L.). Apparently, the Solanaceae contain orthologous genes encoding the fast-moving anionic peroxidases homologous to petunia PRXa.
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    Journal of chemical ecology 16 (1990), S. 1565-1576 
    ISSN: 1573-1561
    Keywords: Nicotiana ; Solanaceae ; Peronospora tabacina ; blue mold ; Alternaria alternata ; leaf surface chemistry ; diterpenes ; sucrose esters ; hydrocarbons ; spore germination
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Chromatographic procedures were utilized to isolate and purify components of tobacco cuticular extracts and leaf surface chemicals.In vitro microbial bioassays determined the influence of these leaf surface compounds on germination and germ tube morphology ofP. tabacina sporangia, the tobacco blue mold pathogen, and to a lesser extentAlternaria alternata, the tobacco brown spot pathogen. Exposure to 10 μg/cm2 of α- and β-duvatrienemonols, sucrose esters, or hydrocarbons did not inhibit germination, whereas germination was significantly decreased bycis-abienol.cis-Abienol did not inhibit sporangial germination when combined with sucrose esters or hydrocarbons at a combined 10 μg/cm2. Germination of sporangia was completely inhibited by α- and β-duvatrienediols. In contrast to a previous report, α-DVT-diol was more inhibitory than the β isomer. Toxic effects of the DVT-diols were not altered by pH. Diluting the DVT-diols to less than 0.1 μg/cm2 resulted in a small but significant stimulation of germination. Previously, the DVT-diols had been identified only as inhibitory toP. tabacina. None of the leaf surface chemicals affected germination ofA. alternata conidia.
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    Plant systematics and evolution 170 (1990), S. 193-204 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Angiosperms ; Solanaceae ; Physalis ; Hair morphology ; systematics ; hair development
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Hair morphology was exammed on developing seedlings and mature plants of ten species from five of seven series inPhysalis. The taxonomic importance of hair development and the distribution of hair types then was evaluated with respect to other comparative data. Two classes of hair types were observed, as found in earlier investigations ofSolanum andRhododendron. The first hair class comprises a sequence from unbranched hairs to dendroid-stelliform hairs. Hairs of this class show considerable variability among taxa in size, presence or absence of glandular tips, and presence and degree of branching, and so were useful in making taxonomic comparisons. The second hair class consists of short hairs, each tipped with a multicellular gland. This second hair class was not useful taxonomically because of its lack of variability in morphology and its often rare occurrence on a plant. The taxa studied exhibit distinctive trichome features which serve to distinguish series and, in some cases together with other data, provided new insight into previously enigmatic species relationships.
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    Entomologia experimentalis et applicata 51 (1989), S. 133-140 
    ISSN: 1570-7458
    Keywords: Coleoptera ; Chrysomelidae ; Leptinotarsa decemlineata ; Colorado potato beetle ; Solanaceae ; Solanum berthaultii ; potato ; plant resistance ; glandular trichomes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Description / Table of Contents: Résumé Les mécanismes de défense de la pomme de terre sauvage, S. berthaultii Hawkes, aux larves de Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say, ont été étudiés par ablation sélective des trichomes glandulaires et par l'élimination de leur exsudat des folioles, et par comparaison avec S. tuberosum L. qui a perdu les trichomes glandulaires défensifs A et B. L'ablation des trichomes A a augmenté la proportion de larves ayant consommé S. berthaultii. L'élimination de l'exsudat des trichomes B a augmenté la proportion de consommatrices et réduit la mortalité. Les principaux composés actifs de l'exsudat B, c'est-à-dire des esters d'acides gras de sucrose, n'étaient actifs qu'en présence de trichomes A. Les esters de sucrose n'ont pas modifié la consommation larvaire sur folioles de S. tuberosum, ou sur disques de feuilles de S. berthaultii dont les trichomes A avaient été enlevés. La croissance des larves survivantes n'a pas été modifiée significativement par l'ablation des trichomes A ou l'élimination de l'exsudat de B. La croissance des larves a été significativement augmentée quand les folioles de S. berthaultii ont été incorporés dans l'aliment artificiel après élimination de la barrière physique due aux pédoncules B. La croissance a été de même importance sur aliments artificiels contenant des feuilles (fraiches ou en poudre lyophylisée) de S. berthaultii ou de S. tuberosum, mais plus faible que sur folioles de S. tuberosum. La présence de trichomes A est indispensable à la résistance de S. berthaultii aux L, de L. decemlineata. Les gouttelettes de type B contenant des esters de sucrose augmentent l'expression de la résistance en présence d'une défense active par trichomes A.
    Notes: Abstract The defensive mechanisms of the wild potato, solanum berthaultii Hawkes, to larvae of the Colorado potato beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata (Say), were studied by selective removal of glandular trichomes and trichome exudates from leaflets, and by comparing performance on S. berthaultii and on the cultivated potato, S. tuberosum L., which lacks defensively active type A and B glandular trichomes. Removal of type A trichomes increased the proportion of larvae that fed on S. berthaultii. Removal of the exudate from type B trichomes increased the proportion of larvae that fed and led to a decrease in mortality. The predominant active compounds in type B exudate, i.e. fatty acid esters of sucrose, were only effective in the presence of type A trichomes. Sucrose esters did not affect larval feeding on S. tuberosum leaflets or on S. berthaultii leaf discs from which the type A trichomes had been removed. Growth of surviving larvae was not significantly affected by removing type A trichomes or type B exudate. Growth of larvae was significantly increased when S. berthaultii leaflets were presented in artificial diet which eliminated the physical barrier of the type B stalks. Growth was no different on artificial diet containing either S. berthaultii or S. tuberosum leaf material (fresh or lyophilized powder) but was poorer on these diets than on S. tuberosum leaflets. The presence of type A trichomes is a fundamental requirement for expression of S. berthaultii resistance to L1 L. decemlineata. Type B droplets containing sucrose esters increase the expression of resistance in the presence of defensively-active type A trichomes.
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    Plant and soil 119 (1989), S. 251-254 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: extraction systems ; leaf free amino acids ; Lycopersicon esculentum ; ratio sample weight/extractant volume ; sample preservation ; Solanaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Conditions for extraction of free amino acids from tomato leaves were examined. Two methods of sample preservation were also tested. Best results were obtained when samples were preserved by lyophilization and extracted by Soxhlet for 6 h at 40°C at a ratio of 1 g plant material/80 mL 80% (v/v) ethanol.
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  • 81
    ISSN: 1573-1561
    Keywords: Photosensitizers ; arid/semiarid plants ; Asteraceae ; Zygophyllaceae ; Asclepiadaceae ; Chenopodiaceae ; Hydrophyllaceae ; Lamiaceae ; Polygonaceae ; Solanaceae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Various plants native to arid and semiarid habitats throughout the southwestern United States, Baja California, and northern Mexico were bioassayed for phototoxic natural products. Approximately 115 species representing 57 genera and eight plant families were assayed for phototoxic activity by standard antimicrobial techniques usingEscherichia coli andSaccharomyces cerevisiae. Phototoxic constituents were extracted from numerous members in the Asteraceae (Compositae) and occurred with highest frequency among species of the subtribe Pectidinae (tribe Heliantheae). Extracts ofPectis, the largest genus in the Pectidinae, had substantial light-activated biocidal action despite the paucity of acetylenic thiophenes, the phototoxins characteristic of most other genera in the subtribe. Leaf resin from the creosote bush [Larrea tridentata (Sesse & Mol. ex DC.) Coville; Zygophyllaceae], a dominant desert shrub, possessed potent antimicrobial activity in the absence of light; however, the toxicity of this extract was slightly enhanced in the presence of UVA irradiation. Phototoxic antimicrobials were not detected in extracts of selected species from the Asclepiadaceae, Chenopodiaceae, Hydrophyllaceae, Lamiaceae, Polygonaceae, or Solanaceae.
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    Plant systematics and evolution 166 (1989), S. 31-39 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Angiosperms ; Solanaceae ; Nicotianeae ; Benthamiella pycnophylloides ; Combera paradoxa ; Pantacantha ameghinoi ; Somatic chromosome numbers ; karyotype analyses ; taxonomic and phylogenetic significance
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The somatic chromosomes and karyotypes of threeNicotianeae have been studied for the first time. All of them have 2n = 2x = 22 and symmetrical karyotypes.Benthamiella pycnophylloides has 9 m pairs + 1 sm pair + 1 st pair; pairs 2, 4, 5, and 11 bear microsatellites.Combera paradoxa andPantacantha ameghinoi have 9 m pairs + 2 sm pairs; pair 11 ofC. paradoxa is satellited, while pair 9 ofP. ameghinoi bears microsatellites and shows a pericentric inversion in heterozygous state in 20% of the seedlings. Results are compared with previous chromosome reports for the tribe. The cytological data support their present position in the family system. Besides,Benthamiella, Combera andPantacantha appear to be primitive genera ofNicotianeae, a comparatively advanced tribe within the family.
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  • 83
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    Plant systematics and evolution 165 (1989), S. 159-188 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Angiosperms ; Solanaceae ; Capsicum ; Isozymes ; genetic distance ; geographic differentiation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The evolutionary relationships of 186 accessions ofCapsicum from Mexico were studied through enzyme electrophoresis. A total of 76 alleles representing 20 genetic loci coding for nine enzyme systems were observed and the allelic variations of enzymes were studied for geographical distribution. Allele frequencies were used to estimate the apportionment of gene diversity within and between populations and to construct a dendrogram based on a similarity matrix containingNei genetic distances. — The gene diversity estimates suggest that the structure ofCapsicum populations in Mexico consists of predominantly homozygous genotypes presumably due to a self-pollinated breeding system and population bottlenecks. Significant genetic differentiation was found mainly between populations of differing geographical regions.—Based on the results of this study, three species of domesticatedCapsicum can be identified in Mexico,C. annuum var.annuum, C. chinense, andC. pubescens. Semidomesticated and wild forms include two species,C. frutescens andC. annuum var.glabriusculum. A sharp geographical division results between the latter species;C. frutescens was collected exclusively in the southeastern states of Oaxaca, Chiapas, and Tabasco; whereas wild and semidomesticated forms from the rest of the country areC. annuum. Based upon the similarity of enzyme genotypes of semidomesticated and wild forms, the primary center of domestication of cultivatedC. annuum was estimated to be the region comprising the states of Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leon, San Luis Potosi, Veracruz, and Hidalgo in eastern Mexico. A possible second center of domestication is suggested to be localized in the state of Nayarit, western Mexico.
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  • 84
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    Molecular genetics and genomics 216 (1989), S. 132-137 
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Nitroso-methylurea ; Chloroplast mutations ; Streptomycin resistance
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary A system has been developed for rapid selection of streptomycin resistant mutants, as adventitious shoots arising from explants of several Solanaceous species. Efficient mutagenesis was achieved by incubating shoot culture-derived leaf strips with 1 or 5 mM nitroso-methylurea, for 90 or 120 min. In Nicotiana tabacum and Lycopersicon peruvianum these treatments resulted in white or variegated adventitious shoots from up to 3.5% of explants placed on medium promoting shoot regeneration. Chlorophyll deficiencies were only observed very rarely in Solanum nigrum. Streptomycin resistant shoots were obtained from leaf explants placed on medium containing 500 mg l-1 streptomycin sulphate, under which conditions explants are bleached and adventitious shoot development suppressed. Green adventitious s shoots appeared at a frequency dependent both on the mutagenic treatment and on the species. The best response was with S. nigrum where 〉70% of the explants produced streptomycin resistant shoots, most of which retained their resistance on subsequent testing. Maternal inheritance of streptomycin resistance has been confirmed for several N. tabacum and S. nigrum mutants, and there is also evidence for paternal transmission in the latter species. The procedure has been successfully extended to other species, including N. sylvestris and N. plumbaginifolia, and also to obtain spectinomycin resistant mutants.
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  • 85
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Glutathione (transport, regulation) ; Nicotiana ; Solanaceae ; Sultate (transport, regulation) ; Sulfur nutrition
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Photoheterotrophic and heterotrophic suspension cultures of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L.) were grown with 1 mM glutathione (reduced; GSH) as sole source of sulfur. Addition of sulfate to both cultures did not alter the rate of exponential growth, but affected the removal of GSH and sulfate in different ways. In photoheterotrophic suspensions, addition of sulfate caused a decline in the net uptake of GSH, whereas sulfate was taken up by the green cells immediately. In heterotrophic suspensions, however, addition of sulfate did not affect the net uptake of GSH and sulfate was only taken up by the cells after the GSH supply in the medium had been exhausted. Apparently, GSH uptake in photoheterotrophic cells is inhibited by sulfate, whereas sulfate uptake is inhibited by GSH in heterotrophic cells. The differences in the effect of GSH on sulfate uptake in photoheterotrophic and heterotrophic tobacco suspensions cannot be attributed to differences in the kinetic properties of sulfate carriers. In short-time transport experiments, both cultures took up sulfate almost entirely by an active-transport system as shown by experiments with metabolic inhibitors; sulfate transport of both cultures obeyed monophasic Michaelis-Menten kinetics with similar app. Km (photoheterotrophic cells: 16.0±2.0 μM; heterotrophic cells: 11.8±1.8 μM) and Vmax (photoheterotrophic cells: 323±50 nmol·min-1·g-1 dry weight; heterotrophic cells: 233±3 nmol·min-1·g-1 dry weight). Temperature- and pH-dependence of sulfate transport showed almost identical patterns. However, the cultures exhibited remarkable differences in the inhibition of sulfur influx by GSH in short-time transport experiments. Whereas 1 mM GSH inhibited sulfate transport into heterotrophic tobacco cells completely, sulfate transport into photoheterotrophic cells proceeded at more than two-thirds of its maximum velocity at this GSH concentration. The mode of action of GSH on sulfate transport in chloroplast-free tobacco cell does not appear to be direct: a 14-h exposure to 1 mM GSH was found to be necessary to completely block sulfate transport; a 4-h time of exposure did not affect this process. Consequently, glutathione does not seem to be a product of sulfur metabolism acting on sulfate-carrier entities by negative feedback control. When transferred to the whole plant, the observed differences in sulfate and glutathione influx into green and chloroplast-free cells may be interpreted as a regulatory device to prevent the uptake of excess sulfate by plants.
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  • 86
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: choline ; Fusarium oxysporum ; Lycopersicon esculentum ; nitrogen supply ; OPLC ; Solanaceae ; tomato ; trigonelline ; Nε-trimethyl-L-lysine
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract The choline, trigonelline, Nε-trimethyl-L-lysine content in the leaf tissue of tomato plants grown with varying amounts of nitrate nitrogen was determined by the OPLC method. The choline and trigonelline level in tomato leaves increased in direct ratio to the nitrogen supply. The possible role of these compounds in the physiology and in the augmented resistance of plants to nectrotizing stresses is discussed.
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  • 87
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    Plant systematics and evolution 158 (1988), S. 141-154 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Angiosperms ; Solanaceae ; Lycopersicon esculentum ; Lateral root ; root primordium ; roots in vitro
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Root axes of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) were cultured in vitro in three different concentrations of sucrose in order to vary their growth rate. Lateral root growth and the initiation of lateral root primordia were studied on each group of axes. Various aspects of primordium initiation, positioning, and emergence were quantified with a view to discovering variable and constant features of these processes. Variable parameters were the rate and frequency of root primordium emergence. Constant parameters, at least under the prevailing conditions, were the spacing between successive laterals and primordia, and the position of the primordia in relation to the vascular system. A model of primordium initiation is presented which combines controls determined by the divisional history of the potential primordium cell and by the vascular pattern.
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  • 88
    ISSN: 1617-4623
    Keywords: Chloroplasts transfer ; Cytoplasmic male sterility ; Plastome-genome interaction ; Protoplast fusion ; Solanaceae
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Summary Chloroplast tranfer was achieved by protoplast fusion between Nicotiana tobacum (Cestreae, Cestroideae) and Salpiglossis sinuata (Salpiglossideae, Cestroideae) in the family Solanaceae. Isolation of cybrid clones was facilitated by irradiation of the cytoplasm donor protoplasts, and the use of appropriate plastid mutants, streptomycin-resistant as donor, or light-sensitive as recipient. Cybrid colonies were selected by their green colour against the background of bleached (light-sensitive or streptomycin-sensitive) colonies. In the Nicotiana (Salpiglossis) cybrid plants possessing normal tobacco morphology and chromsome number, the presence of Salpiglossis, plastids was verified by restriction analysis of the chloroplast DNA. A similar analysis of the mitochondrial DNA of these lines revealed unique, recombinant patterns in the case of both fertile and sterile plants. Progeny showed no appearance of chlorophyll-deficiency in F1 and an additional back-cross generation. Attempts at transfer of entire chloroplasts between Nicotiana tabacum and Solanum nigrum (Solaneae, Solanoideae) did not result in any cybrid cell lines in a medium suitable for green colony formation of both species. These results suggest that fusion-mediated chloroplast transfer can surmount a considerable taxonomical distance, but might be hampered by a plastome-genome incompatibility in more remote combinations.
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  • 89
    ISSN: 1573-5028
    Keywords: evolution ; gene family ; genomic clone ; PSI CAB ; RFLP mapping ; Solanaceae
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We report the isolation and characterization of a tomato nuclear gene encoding a chlorophyll a/b-binding (CAB) protein of photosystem I (PSI). The coding nucleotide sequence of the gene, designated Cab-6B, is different at eight positions from that of a previously isolated cDNA clone derived from the Cab-6A gene, but the two genes encode identical proteins. Sequence comparison with the cDNA clone revealed the presence of three short introns in Cab-6B. Genetic mapping experiments demonstrate that Cab-6A and Cab-6B are tightly linked and reside on chromosome 5, but the physical distance between the two genes is at least 7 kilobases. Cab-6A and Cab-6B have been designated Type I PSI CAB genes. They are the only two genes of this branch of the CAB gene family in the tomato genome, and they show substantial divergence to the genes encoding CAB polypeptides of photosystem II. The Type I PSI CAB genes, like the genes encoding PSII CAB proteins, are highly expressed in illuminated leaf tissue and to a lesser extent in other green organs.
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  • 90
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    Plant and soil 104 (1987), S. 275-280 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: accumulation ; Cd ; Cruciferae ; Cucurbitaceae ; Gramineae ; Leguminosae ; NH4NO3-extractable Cd ; sand soil ; soil pH ; Solanaceae ; Taxonomy ; tolerance
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Ten plant species belonging to 5 families,i.e., Cruciferae, Cucurbitaceae, Gramineae, Leguminosae, and Solanaceae, were grown in a sand soil at two pH levels. The soil was subjected to an application of CdCl2 at rates of 0 to 700 mgCd·kg−1 soil. The relationship between Cd concentration in the shoots (tc) and soil (sc; NH4NO3 extractable) was expressed by the equation: log (tc)=α+βlog (sc). The coefficients α and β were estimated for each species at each level of soil pH. Plottings of the scores on α and β axes showed that the Cd accumulation characteristics in the plants appeared to depend on the families irrespective of soil pH. Based on theupper critical concentration of Cd in the tops (Ct), the Cruciferae and Leguminosae species were found to be the most and the least tolerant to Cd, respectively. The Ct values correlated exceedingly well with the values of α.
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  • 91
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    Plant systematics and evolution 157 (1987), S. 161-180 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Angiosperms ; Solanaceae ; Nicotiana ; Nuclear DNA ; heterochromatin ; chromosome differentiation ; evolution
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A survey of 51 species fromNicotiana subgg.Tabacum, Rustica andPetunioides has shown that evolution was accompanied by a five-fold variation in nuclear DNA amounts. This variation, however, was not directly correlated with the changes in chromosome number. Drastic rearrangement of karyotypes is characteristic for the evolution ofNicotiana spp. Significant gain or loss in nuclear DNA has often accompanied such changes, but DNA variation has also occurred without significant changes in karyotype arrangements.—The distribution of nuclear DNA is discontinuous inNicotiana, species cluster into DNA groups with consistently regular increments in the mean DNA amounts. The discontinuities are viewed as “steady states” in terms of genomic balance and biological fitness.—Changes in the amount of nuclear DNA and in the heterochromatin are compared with the morphological, chromosomal and adaptive changes which accompanied speciation in 14 subgeneric sections. The evolutionary significance of DNA variation is discussed.
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  • 92
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    Plant and soil 92 (1986), S. 405-415 
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Accumulation ; Cd ; Chenopodiaceae ; Compositae ; Cruciferae ; Cucurbitaceae ; Gramineae ; Leguminosae ; Liliaceae ; Sand soil ; Solanaceae ; Taxonomy ; Umbelliferae
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Summary Thirty four plant species belonging to 9 families were grown on a sand soil with various levels of added Cd. The Cd content of aerial parts of the plants (tc) was correlated to the soil Cd level (sc) in a double-logarithmic relationship: log (tc)=α+β log (sc). The regression coefficients α and β statistically differed among plant families. Plant families were classified into 3 groups based on the α values; (1) low accumulation, Leguminosae; (2) moderate accumulation, Gramineae, Liliaceae, Cucurbitaceae and Umbelliferae; and (3) high accumulation, Chenopodiaceae, Cruciferae, Solanaceae and Compositae. Values of β also enabled to discriminate the families into (1) Umbelliferae, Cucurbitaceae and Cruciferae in which Cd accumulation was promoted at higher soil Cd levels, and. (2) the other families which were of the excluder type.
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  • 93
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    Journal of chemical ecology 11 (1985), S. 73-83 
    ISSN: 1573-1561
    Keywords: Colorado potato beetle ; Leptinotarsa decemlineata ; Coleoptera ; Chrysomelidae ; feeding deterrents ; Solanaceae ; Solanum alkaloids ; chemo-receptors ; mouthpart sensilla ; tomatine ; solanine ; chaconine ; demissine ; leptine III
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology
    Notes: Abstract Steroidal glycoalkaloids, found in species of the Solanaceae, elicit bursting activity in galeal and tarsal chemosensilla of adult Colorado potato beetles. The effect has an average latency of 6–12 sec, depending on the sensillum/alkaloid combination. A 20-sec alkaloid treatment is often suffficient to render galeal sensilla unresponsive to gamma-aminobutyric acid, normally an effective stimulant. The alkaloids have similar effects on galeal sensilla of larval Colorado potato beetles and on labellar chemosensilla of the blowfly. It is concluded that these compounds act independently of any specialized chemoreceptor in the Colorado potato beetle, and that association of the Colorado potato beetle with solanaceous plants has not led to evolution of a specific receptor forSolanum glycoalkaloids.
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  • 94
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Angiosperms ; Solanaceae ; Nicotiana. — Habituation ; differentiation ; crown gall ; tissue culture ; evolution
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    Notes: Abstract Differentiation on hormoneless media, habituation ability and crown gall induction inNicotiana tissue cultures have been used as physiological parameters of evolutionary differentiation between species. Some of them on hormone free media differentiated whole plantlets, others produced only shoots or roots or showed undifferentiated growth (habituation), some eventually died. Moreover, the same genotypes showed a differential behaviour as far as tumor formation byAgrobacterium tumefaciens was concerned. Particularly, the competence for crown gall transformation inNicotiana species seems negatively correlated with differentiation capacity and may be ascribed to differences in the plants capacity to synthesize growth regulators. The correlation between the results obtained and the phylogenetic position of the genotypes tested is finally discussed.
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  • 95
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    Plant systematics and evolution 145 (1984), S. 165-168 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Angiosperms ; Solanaceae ; Datura innoxia ; Haploidy ; diploidy ; triploidy ; tetraploidy ; hexaploidy ; amino acid composition
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract In haploid, diploid, triploid, tetraploid and hexaploid cytotypes of the scopalamine-yieldingDatura innoxia, the amino acid profiles were studied. The results suggest that the amino acid composition is influenced quantitatively by increasing ploidy levels, but in an irregular way.
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  • 96
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    Plant systematics and evolution 148 (1984), S. 1-18 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Angiosperms ; Solanaceae ; Solanum tuberosum ; Allozyme variability ; polyploidy ; phylogeny
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Gene frequencies at 13 isozyme loci were determined in three South American taxa of cultivated potatoes [the diploid group (gp.) Stenotomum, the diploid subgroups (subgp.) Goniocalyx, and the tetraploid gp. Andigena ofS. tuberosum], in the diploid weed speciesS. sparsipilum, and in most of the main cultivars now raised in the Northern Hemisphere (the tetraploid gp. Tuberosum ofS. tuberosum). High levels of genetic variability (mean number of alleles per locus, percentage of polymorphic loci, and mean heterozygosity) were detected, being higher in tetraploid potatoes. An equilibrium among the evolutionary factors which increase genetic variability and artificial selection for maximum yield would explain the high uniformity of heterozygosity values we observed in both Andigena (0.36 ± 0.02) and Tuberosum (0.38 ± 0.01) cultivars.—The low value of genetic distance (D = 0.044) between Stenotomum and Goniocalyx does not support the status of species forS. goniocalyx.—In most isozyme loci, the electromorphs of gp. Andigena were a combination of those found in both gp. Stenotomum andS. sparsipilum, suggesting an amphidiploid origin of gp. Andigena from that two diploid taxa. The presence in Andigena of unique electromorphs, which were lacking in both gp. Stenotomum andS. sparsipilum, suggests that other diploid species could be also implied in the origin of tetraploid Andean potatoes. Furthermore, since Andigena were more related to Stenotomum (D = 0.052) than toS. sparsipilum (D = 0.241), the autopolyploidization of Stenotomum individuals and the subsequent hybridization with gp. Andigena may also have occurred. Thus, our study suggests a multiple origin (amphidiploidy, autoploidy, and hybridization at tetraploid level) of gp. Andigena.—Most of the electromorphs of gp. Tuberosum were also found in gp. Andigena; both the direct derivation of that group from the Andean tetraploid potatoes and the repeated introgression provided by breeding programmes could explain this result. However, the allele c of Pgm-B, present in 30 out of 76 Tuberosum cultivars from Northern Hemisphere as well as in 3 Chilean Tuberosum cultivars, lacks in the 258 Andigena genotypes sampled, suggesting that Chilean germplasm could have taken part in the origin of at least the 39% of the potato cultivars from Europe and North America analyzed here.—The distanceWagner procedure provides an estimate of a 30% of heterogeneity in the evolutionary divergence shown by different groups of cultivated potatoes. Diploid groups show a higher (22.5%) evolutionary rate than tetraploids, which can be attributed to both tetrasomic inheritance and facultative autofecundation that exists in Andigena and Tuberosum groups. Thus, artificial selection acting since 10000 years has not resulted in a higher rate of molecular evolution at the isozyme level in the tetraploids.
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  • 97
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    Plant systematics and evolution 145 (1984), S. 55-77 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Angiosperms ; Acanthaceae ; Bignoniaceae ; Bombacaceae ; Caesalpiniaceae ; Caryocaraceae ; Chrysobalanaceae ; Fabaceae ; Lobeliaceae ; Lythraceae ; Malvaceae ; Marcgraviaceae ; Mimosaceae ; Musaceae ; Onagraceae ; Orchidaceae ; Passifloraceae ; Proteaceae ; Rubiaceae ; Solanaceae ; Tiliaceae ; Zingiberaceae ; Flower nectar ; amino acids ; sugars ; evolutionary significance ; pollination biology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Individual amino acids and sugars from flower nectar of 32 plant species with different pollination systems were quantified and compared. Data show that there is no correlation between sugar and amino acid concentration. Furthermore there is no correlation between composition and concentration of amino acids and evolutionary advancement, nor any direct relation with pollination systems. However, higher sugar concentrations are often linked with more advanced morphological characters. Nectars from pierced or damaged flowers or nectars contaminated with pollen exhibit modifications and increases in amino acid composition. The presence of proline probably indicates such pollen contamination. Most pollinating animals depend on flower nectar in their energetic requirements, yet innumerable alternative amino acid and protein sources exist. Future research has to consider the relationship between nutritional requirements of pollinating animals and dependence on flower nectars.
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    Plant systematics and evolution 139 (1982), S. 229-256 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Solanaceae ; Solanum ; Lycopersicon ; Potatoes ; tomato ; “pepino” ; phylogeny ; pubescence ; indumentum ; anatomy of hairs
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The usefulness of features of leaf hairs in distinguishing subgenera and sections is well documented in bothRhododendron andSolanum. In this analysis of the taxa ofSolanum sect.Basarthrum (23 species), and of a sample of closely related taxa from sect.Petota (22 species), it is shown that such features serve to delineate subsectional groups such as series and some species as well. SectionBasarthrum has an unexpected diversity of hair types. Although this group has been characterized by 2-celled “bayonet hairs”, more than one half of the taxa in the section bear multicellular “finger hairs”, and 3 species also possess branched hairs. Thus, major rearrangements of the species previously assigned to sect.Basarthrum are indicated or supported by pubescence features. The taxa studied from seriesEtuberosa andJuglandifolia (both of sect.Petota) show hair types that a) are relatively primitive for the section, and b) show linkage between sects.Petota andBasarthrum.
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  • 99
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    Plant systematics and evolution 141 (1982), S. 7-21 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Angiosperms ; Acanthaceae ; Asteraceae ; Cistaceae ; Brassicaceae ; Cucurbitaceae ; Euphorbiaceae ; Juncaceae ; Lamiaceae ; Linaceae ; Lythraceae ; Nyctaginaceae ; Plantaginaceae ; Poaceae ; Podostemaceae ; Polemoniaceae ; Scrophulariaceae ; Solanaceae ; Urticaceae ; Zygophyllaceae ; Mucilage content of myxospermatic diaspores ; extraction procedures ; swelling factors ; substructures of mucilages
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract The mucilage content of structurally differing myxospermatic diaspores from 49 species belonging to 19 families ofAngiospermae has been determined by applying various extraction procedures. The results demonstrate no obvious relationship between the size, mucilage quantity, and the swelling factor of the diaspores studied. Furthermore, mucilage producing structures and structural peculiarities of the mucilages themselves are elaborated.
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    Plant systematics and evolution 139 (1981), S. 11-45 
    ISSN: 1615-6110
    Keywords: Angiosperms ; Solanaceae ; Lycopersicon ; Solanum pennellii ; Allozymes ; electrophoresis ; isozymes ; mating systems ; self-incompatibility
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Genetic variation—primarily in 19 genetic loci of seven enzyme systems—was analyzed in accessions from various parts of the geographic range ofSolanum pennellii, which according to all tested biosystematic criteria behaves like a species ofLycopersicon. In comparison with the largely sympatricL. hirsutum andL. pimpinellifolium, this species exhibits the same trends of reduced allogamy and decreased genetic variation toward the north and south margins of its distribution, though to a much lesser degree; it does not exhibit their trends toward smaller flower size in the same peripheral regions. All three species agree to a considerable extent in the ranking of their tested loci in respect to degree of variablility; however, overall polymorphy is highest inS. pennellii. Except for the appearance of self-compatibility at its southernmost margin,S. pennellii is exclusively and rigidly self-incompatible. Alleles are distributed much more uniformly over the range than in the previously mentioned species, marginal and internal endemic mutants being much less abundant. A marked geographic disagreement is evident in regions of high and low variation. These differences in patterns of genetic variability are reconciled in terms of observed differences in mating systems, probable age of distributions, and adaptive strategies.
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