Fusarium Pathogenomics
University of Massachusetts Amherst · Pennsylvania State University · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Fusarium is a genus of filamentous fungi that contains many agronomically important plant pathogens, mycotoxin producers, and opportunistic human pathogens. Comparative analyses have revealed that the Fusarium genome is compartmentalized into regions responsible for primary metabolism and reproduction (core genome), and pathogen virulence, host specialization, and possibly other functions (adaptive genome). Genes involved in virulence and host specialization are located on pathogenicity chromosomes within strains pathogenic to tomato (Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici) and pea (Fusarium 'solani' f. sp. pisi). The experimental transfer of pathogenicity chromosomes from F. oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici into a…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 11.15
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 86
Authors
9- LMLi‐Jun MaCorresponding
University of Massachusetts Amherst
- DMDavid M. Geiser
Pennsylvania State University
- RHRobert H. Proctor
Agricultural Research Service, National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research
- APAlejandro P. Rooney
Agricultural Research Service, National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research
- KOKerry O’Donnell
Agricultural Research Service, National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research
Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Virulence
- Genome
- Horizontal gene transfer
- Fusarium oxysporum
- Genetics
- Fusarium
- Gene