Fungal plant pathologists have for many decades attempted to classify pathogens into groups called necrotrophs, biotrophs and, more recently, hemibiotrophs. Although these terms are well known and frequently used, disagreements about which pathogens fall into which classes, as well as the precise definition of these terms, has conspired to limit their usefulness. Dogmas concerning the properties of the classes have been progressively eroded. However, the genetic analysis of disease resistance, particularly in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana, has provided a biologically meaningful division based on whether defence against fungal pathogens is controlled via the salicylate or jasmonate/ethylene pathways. This mode-of-defence division dist...
Hemibiotrophic fungal pathogens cause major destruction to food and industrial crops globally. Their...
Plant pathology has a long-standing tradition of classifying microbes as pathogens, endophytes or sa...
Over the course of evolution, fungi have adapted to occupy specific niches, from symbiotically inhab...
Fungal plant pathologists have for many decades attempted to classify pathogens into groups called n...
The traditional classification of fungal and oomycete phytopathogens into three classes – biotrophs,...
Fungi are among the dominant causal agents of plant diseases. To colonize plants and cause disease, ...
International audienceIrrespective of the bacteria considered, after an initial biotrophic phase, in...
Fungi and Oomycetes are notorious plant pathogens and use similar strategies to infect plants. The m...
Given a shared toolbox of pathogenicity-related genes among a set of species, why is one species a b...
Necrotrophic fungal pathogens cause major losses to fruit, vegetable, and cereal crops annually and ...
The powdery mildew diseases, caused by fungal species of the Erysiphales, have an important economic...
It was generally considered that necrotrophic plant pathogenic fungi possessed simplistic pathogenic...
Seed transmission constitutes a major component of the parasitic cycle for several fungal pathogens....
The Sclerotiniaceae (Ascomycotina, Leotiomycetes) is a relatively recently evolved lineage of necrot...
In plant pathology, the correct naming of a species is essential for determining the causal agents o...
Hemibiotrophic fungal pathogens cause major destruction to food and industrial crops globally. Their...
Plant pathology has a long-standing tradition of classifying microbes as pathogens, endophytes or sa...
Over the course of evolution, fungi have adapted to occupy specific niches, from symbiotically inhab...
Fungal plant pathologists have for many decades attempted to classify pathogens into groups called n...
The traditional classification of fungal and oomycete phytopathogens into three classes – biotrophs,...
Fungi are among the dominant causal agents of plant diseases. To colonize plants and cause disease, ...
International audienceIrrespective of the bacteria considered, after an initial biotrophic phase, in...
Fungi and Oomycetes are notorious plant pathogens and use similar strategies to infect plants. The m...
Given a shared toolbox of pathogenicity-related genes among a set of species, why is one species a b...
Necrotrophic fungal pathogens cause major losses to fruit, vegetable, and cereal crops annually and ...
The powdery mildew diseases, caused by fungal species of the Erysiphales, have an important economic...
It was generally considered that necrotrophic plant pathogenic fungi possessed simplistic pathogenic...
Seed transmission constitutes a major component of the parasitic cycle for several fungal pathogens....
The Sclerotiniaceae (Ascomycotina, Leotiomycetes) is a relatively recently evolved lineage of necrot...
In plant pathology, the correct naming of a species is essential for determining the causal agents o...
Hemibiotrophic fungal pathogens cause major destruction to food and industrial crops globally. Their...
Plant pathology has a long-standing tradition of classifying microbes as pathogens, endophytes or sa...
Over the course of evolution, fungi have adapted to occupy specific niches, from symbiotically inhab...