835
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Article; Agriculture & Environmental Biotechnology

Identification of activation-tag Arabidopsis mutants with altered production of germination stimulants for Phelipanche ramosa (L.)

, , , , , & show all

References

  • Cronquist A. The evolution and classification of parasitic plants. Bronx: NewYork Botanical Garden; 1988; p. 258.
  • Fernández-Aparicio M, Yoneyama K, Rubiales D. The role of strigolactones in host specificity of Orobanche and Phelipanche seed germination. Seed Sci Res. 2011;21:55–61.
  • Kuijt J. The biology of parasitic flowering plants. Berkeley (CA): University of California Press; 1969. p. 58.
  • Wolfe AD, Randle CP, Liu L, Steiner KE. Phylogeny and biogeography of Orobanchaceae. Folia Geobot. 2005;40:115–134.
  • Young ND, Steiner KE, de Pamphilis CW. The evolution of parasitism in Scrophulariaceae/Orobanchaceae: plastid gene sequences refute an evolutionary transition series. Ann Missouri Bot Garden. 1999;86(4):876–893.
  • Musselman L. The biology of Striga, Orobanche and other root-parasitic weeds. Ann Rev Phytopathol. 1980;18(1):463–489.
  • Parker C, Riches CR. Biology and Management of Orobanche. In: Pieterse AH, Verkleij JAC, ter Borg SJ, editors. Proceedings of the third international workshop on Orobanche and related Striga research. Amsterdam: Royal Tropical Institute; 1993; p. 17–26.
  • Butler LG. Allelopathy. In: Inderjit KM, Dakshini M, Einhellig FA, editors. Organism, processes and application. Vol. 582 ( Symposium Series). Washington, DC: American Chemical Society; 1995. p. 158–168.
  • Pierce S, Mbwaga AM, Press MC, Scholes JD. Xenognosin production and tolerance to Striga asiatica infection of high-yielding maize cultivars. Weed Res. 2003;43(2):139–145.
  • Yoder JI, Scholes JD. Host plant resistance to parasitic weeds; recent progress and bottlenecks. Curr Opin Plant Biol. 2010;13(4):478–484.
  • Galindo JCG, Macías FA, García-Díaz MD, Jorrín J. Chemistry of host-parasite interactions. In: Macías FA, Galindo JCG, Molinillo JMG, Cutler HG, editors. Allelopathy: chemistry and mode of action of allelochemicals. Boca Raton (FL): CRC Press; 2004. p. 125–148.
  • Kohlen W, Charnikhova T, Liu Q, Bours R, Domagalska MA, Beguerie S, Verstappen F, Leyser O, Bouwmeester H, Ruyter- Spira C. Strigolactones are transported through the xylem and play a key role in shoot architectural response to phosphate deficiency in nonarbuscular mycorrhizal host Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol. 2011;155(2):974–987.
  • Akiyama K., Matsuzaki K., Hayashi H. Plant sesquiterpenes induce hyphal branching in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. Nature. 2005;435:824–827.
  • Yoneyama K., Xie X., Sekimoto H., Takeuchi Y. Strigolactones, host recognition signals for root parasitic plants and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, from Fabaceae plants. New Phytol. 2008;179:484–494.
  • Akiyama K, Hayashi H. Strigolactones: chemical signals for fungal symbionts and parasitic weeds in plant roots. Ann Bot. 2006;97(6):925–931.
  • Bouwmeester HJ, Roux C, Lopez-Raez JA, Becard G. Rhizosphere communication of plants, parasitic plants and AM fungi. Trends Plant Sci. 2007;12(5):224–230.
  • Matusova R, Rani K, Verstappen FWA, Franssen MCR, Beale MH, Bouwmeester HJ. The strigolactone germination stimulants of the plant-parasitic Striga and Orobanche spp. are derived from the carotenoid pathway. Plant Physiol. 2005;139:920–934.
  • Rani K, Zwanenburg B, Sugimoto Y, Yoneyama K, Bouwmeester HJ. Biosynthetic considerations could assist the structure elucidation of host plant produced rhizosphere signaling compounds (strigolactones) for arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and parasitic plants. Plant Physiol Biochem. 2008;46(7):617–626.
  • Joel DM. The long-term approach to parasitic weeds control: manipulation of specific developmental mechanisms of the parasite. Crop Prot. 2000;19(8–10):753–758.
  • Westwood JH, Foy CL. Arabidopsis thaliana can be a model host for Orobanche research. In: Wegmann K, Musselman LJ, Joel DM, editors. Proceedings of 4th International Workshop on Orobanche; 1998. p. 155–160.
  • Goldwasser Y, Plakhine D, Yoder JI. Arabidopsis thaliana susceptibility to Orobanche ssp. Weed Sci. 2000;48:342–346.
  • Westwood JH. Characterization of the Orobanche-Arabidopsis system for studying parasite-host interactions. Weed Sci. 2000;48:742–748.
  • Westwood JH. Parasitic plant research in the era of genomics. In: Fer A, Thalouarn P, Joel DM, Musselman LJ, Parker C, Verkleij JAC, editors. Proceedings of the 7th International Parasitic Weed Symposium. 2001 Jun 5–8; Nantes, France. p. 82–87.
  • Weigel D, Ahn J, Blazquez M, Borevitz J, Christenses S, Fankhauser C, Ferrandiz C, Kardailsky I, Malancharuvil E, Neff M, Nguyen J, Sato S, Wang Z-Y, Xia Y, Dixon R, Harrison M, Lamb C, Yanofsky M, Chory J. Activation tagging in Arabidopsis. Plant Physiol. 2000;122:1003–1013.
  • Hayashi H, Czaja I, Lubenow H, Schell J, Walden R. Activation of a plant gene by T-DNA tagging: auxin-independent growth in vitro. Science. 1992;258:1350–1353.
  • Denev ID, Deneva BE, Bachvarova R, Westwood J. Use of T-DNA activation tag Arabidopsis mutants in studying formation of germination stimulants for broomrapes (Orobanche spp.). Biotechnol Biotech Equipment. 2007;21(4):403–407.
  • Denev ID, Deneva BE, Bachvarova R. The biosynthetic origin of germination stimulants for Orobanche ramosa (L.) in tobacco and Arabidopsis. Biotechnol Biotech Equipment. 2007;21(1):54–57.
  • Mangnus EM, Stommen PLA, Zwanenburg B. A standardized bioassay for evaluation of potential germination stimulants for seeds of parasitic weeds. J Plant Growth Regul. 1992;11(2):91–98.
  • Rogers SO, Bendich AJ. Extraction of DNA from milligram amounts of fresh, herbarium and mummified plant tissues. Plant Mol Biol. 1985;5:69–76.
  • Liu YG, Whittier RF. Thermal asymmetric interlaced PCR: automatable amplification and sequencing of insert end fragments from P1 and Yac clones for chromosome walking. Genomics. 1995;25:674–681.
  • Liu YG, Mitsukawa N, Oosumi T, Whittier RF. Efficient isolation and mapping of Arabidopsis thaliana T-DNA insert junctions by thermal asymmetric interlaced PCR. Plant J. 1995;8:457–463.
  • Gechev T, Mehterov N, Denev I, Hille J. A simple and powerful approach for isolation of Arabidopsis mutants with increased tolerance to H2O2-induced cell death. Methods Enzymol. 2013;527:203–220.
  • Protocol Online. Analys of genomic DNA by Southern hybridization (Southern blot) [Internet]. San Francisco (CA): POL Scientific; 2002. p. c1999–2011 [cited 2014 Mar 14]. Available from: http://www.protocol-online.org/cgi-bin/prot/view_cache.cgi?ID=2746
  • Liang P, Pardee AB. Differential display of eukaryotic messenger RNA by means of the polymerase chain reaction. Science. 1992;257:967–971.
  • Sanguinetti CJ, Dias Neto E, Simpson AJ. Rapid silver staining and recovery of PCR products separated on polyacrylamide gels. Biotechniques. 1994;17(5):914–921.
  • Stein J, Liang P. Differential display technology: a general guide. Cell Mol Life Sci. 2002;59:1235–1240.
  • Altschul SF, Madden TL, Scha¨ffer AA, Zhang J, Zhang Z, Miller W, Lipman DJ. Gapped BLAST and PSI-BLAST: a new generation of protein database search programs. Nucleic Acids Res. 1997;25:3389–3402.
  • Denev I, Deneva B, Bouwmeester H, Westwood J. Biosynthesis of germination stimulants for branched broomrape (Orobanche ramosa L.). In: Joel D, Musselman L, Parker C, editors. Proceedings of Annual congress of Weeds Science Society of America. 2003 Feb 13–17; Jacksonville (FL). p. 45–48.
  • Denev I, Pereira A, Verstappen F, Bouwmeester H. In: Fer A, Thalouarn P, Joel D, Musselman L, Parker C, Verkleij J, editors. Proceedings of the 7th International Parasitic Weed Symposium; 2001 Jun 5–8; Nantes, France. p. 110–113.
  • Borevitz JO, Xia Y, Blount J, Dixon RA, Chris L. Activation tagging identifies a conserved MYB regulator of phenylpropanoid biosynthesis. Plant Cell. 2000;12:2383–2393.
  • Abel C, Clauss M, Schaub A, Gershenzon J, Tholl D. Floral and insect-induced volatile formation in Arabidopsis lyrata ssp. petraea, a perennial, outcrossing relative of A. thaliana. Planta. 2009;230(1):1–11.