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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: web + tomatoes + 0.38  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Mexico?s inflation accelerates more than forecast
Tehran Times, Iran - Jul 25, 2008
... costs for tomatoes, tourism packages and electricity. Inflation was 0.38 percent in the first half of July, the central bank said on its Web site. ...
Source: Google News

[CITATION] This is not a peer-reviewed article. Remote Monitoring of Color of Agricultural Products in the …
A Hashimoto, K Yasui, M Takahashi, S Yonekura, T …
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L-Malic acid biosensor for field-based evaluation of apple, potato and tomato horticultural produce -
M Arif, SJ Setford, KS Burton, IE Tothill - The Analyst, 2002 - rsc.org
... First published on the web 5th December 2001. ... acid in apple, potato and tomato
horticultural samples has ... The working electrode contained 0.38 mU of immobilised ...

Remote Monitoring of Color of Agricultural Products in the Field Using a Digital Camera and the … -
A Hashimoto, K Yasui, M Takahashi, S Yonekura, T … - asae.frymulti.com
... Methods The images of the tomato fruit sampled from the tree and ... with 6.30 million
CMOS (EOS Kiss Digital, Canon), fine web camera with 0.38 million CCD ...
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EFFECT OF SALT STRESS ON WATER RELATIONS AND ANTIOXIDANT ACTIVITY IN TOMATO -
S De Pascale, A Maggio, G Angelino, G Graziani - VIII International Symposium on the Processing Tomato 613, 2002 - ISHS
... 2+ 1.55, Mg 2+ 0.84, Cl - 0.38, SO 4 ... Tomatine Contents in Different Typologies of
Fresh Consumption Tomatoes. XXXX American Chemical Society, published on Web. ...
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… Regions of the Ovary in Triticum aestivum L. and Taraxacum officinale Web. during the Preparation … -
MA Gusakovskaya, AN Blintsov - Doklady Biochemistry and Biophysics, 2001 - Springer
... Web. ... to division: v = 0.67, 0.34, and 0.10 in wheat and v = 0.68, 0.38, and 0.14 ... A
similar zeatin fork was observed in tomato xylem exudate [6]. Because flower ...

[PDF] DEVELOPMENT OF A FREEZING METHODOLOGY IN LIQUID NITROGEN OF TREE TOMATO (Cyphomandra betacea (Cav.) …
JE Montoya, RH Escobar, DG Debouck - ciat.cgiar.org
... are Com?n and Amarillo (about 0.38 US dollars ... 3. Recovery plants of Tree Tomato
cultivars: left ... 1. CCI-Corporaci?n Colombia Internacional (2002) Web site: http ...

[BOOK] Tomato Plant Culture: In the Field, Greenhouse, and Home Garden -
JB Jones - 1999 - books.google.com
... Visit the CRC Press Web site at www.crcpress.com ... Page 5. Preface Tomato is the second
most commonly grown vegetable crop in the world, potato being number one. ...

QTL analysis of quantitative resistance to Phytophthora infestans (late blight) in tomato and … -
DJ Brouwer, ES Jones, DA St Clair - Genome, 2004 - article.pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca
... to the fungicide metalaxyl and some are capable of infecting both tomato and potato ...
Published on the NRC Research Press Web site at http://genome.nrc.ca on 5 ...

Assessment of Tomato Germplasm for Resistance to Fruit Borer Helicoverpa (= Heliothis) armigera … -
V Selvanarayanan, P Narayanasamy - JOURNAL OF VEGETABLE SCIENCE, 2006 - haworthpress.com
... Available online at http://www.haworthpress.com/web/JVS ? 2006 ... susceptible check)
74.4 i 24.5 f 15.5 f 0.38 f ... Evaluation of tomatoes for fruit worm resistance ...

[BOOK] Web Database Applications with PHP and MySQL -
HE Williams - 2004 - books.google.com
Page 1. Building Effective Database-Driven Web Si Web Database Applications with
and Hugh E. Williams & David Lane ... Web Database Applications with PHP and MySQL ...

Source: Google Scholar

In evolutionary arms race, a bacterium is found that outwits tomato plant's defenses, Cornell study finds

An arms race is under way in the plant world. It is an evolutionary battle in which plants are trying to beef up their defenses against the innovative strategies of pathogens. The latest example of this war is a bacterium (Pseudomonas syringae) that infects tomatoes by injecting a special protein into the plant's cells and undermines the plant's defense system.

"Plant breeders often find that five or six years after their release, resistant plant varieties become susceptible because pathogens can evolve very quickly to overcome plant defenses," said Gregory Martin, Cornell professor of plant pathology, a scientist at the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research (BTI) on the Cornell campus and the senior author of the research paper, published in the July 19 issue of the journal Nature. "However, every now and then, breeders develop a plant variety that stays resistant for 20 years or more."

Understanding why some varieties have more durable disease resistance is important to the development of more sustainable agricultural practices, he said.

The study by Cornell and BTI scientists describes how a single bacterial protein, AvrPtoB, which is injected by P. syringae into plant cells through a kind of molecular syringe, can overcome the plant's resistance. Normally, the plant's defense system looks out for such pathogens and, if detected, mounts an immune response to stave off disease. As part of this surveillance system, tomatoes carry a protein in their cells called Fen that helps detect P. syringae and trigger an immune response.

But some strains of P. syringae have evolved the AvrPtoB protein that mimics a tomato enzyme known as an E3 ubiquitin ligase, which tags proteins to be destroyed. Once injected, AvrPtoB binds the Fen protein, and the plant's own system eliminates it, allowing the bacteria to avoid detection and cause disease.

"This paper explains how a pathogen can evolve to escape detection," said lead author Tracy Rosebrock, a graduate student in Cornell's Department of Plant Pathology and BTI. "The bacterium has one specific protein that it uses to turn off the plant's immunity."

The researchers found that the Fen gene is present in both cultivated tomatoes and many wild tomato species, leading them to believe that the gene is likely ancient in origin and that many members of the tomato family have used it to resist P. syringae infections over the years. Since the Fen protein still detects AvrPtoB-like proteins from some strains of P. syringae, prompting an effective immune response, the researchers believe new P. syringae strains have only recently evolved a version of AvrPtoB that includes an E3 ubiquitin ligase enzyme that interferes with the plant's surveillance.

"This paper provides molecular data that supports the evolutionary 'arms race' theory" that as pathogens develop new ways to spread and attack organisms, the organisms in turn create novel defenses, each in a continuous battle to outdo the other, said Rosebrock.

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and the Triad Foundation, a private charitable trust.

 
 
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