خيارات البحث
النتائج 1 - 4 من 4
Efficient Yield of Embryoids by Culture of Isolated Microspores of Different Brassicaceae Species النص الكامل
1989
Lighter, R.
Microspore culture of rapeseed (Brassica napus) is well established in practical plant breeding as a potent method to produce homozygous plants. Except for B. carinata the method has not yet been applied to other Brassicaceae species. The present study describes successful microspore culture of B. campestris, B. nigra, B. oleracea and Raphanus sativus, overcoming the break down of such microspore cultures possibly arising from the release and accumulation of toxic substances into the medium. The modified procedure is as follows: exchange of the incubation medium after one day of culture, addition of activated charcoal to the medium and aerating the three day old microspore culture by agitating the petri dishes on a specially constructed shaker.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Identification of chemical imposition stimulants for the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella, present in three species of Brassicaceae النص الكامل
1989
Reed, D.W. | Pivnick, K.A. | Underhill, E.W.
Plant chemicals in three cruciferous crop species, Brassica napus L., B. juncea (L.) Czerniak, and Sinapis alba L., that stimulate oviposition in the diamondback moth, Plutella xylostella (L.) (Lepidoptera: Plutellidae) were investigated in laboratory bioassays. Aerial portions of 4- to 6-week-old plants were extracted and fractionated using ion-exchange liquid chromatography. The oviposition stimulants were identified as glucosinolates, which are found in all Brassicaceae species. Activity of extracts was largely eliminated by treatment with myrosinase or sulphatase, enzymes which degrade glucosinolates. Reference standards of the same glucosinolates and in the same concentrations as in the extracts were equally stimulatory. A test with eight different glucosinolates demonstrated that the moths do not discriminate between glucosinolates with different side-chain structures. However, in tests using allylglucosinolate the oviposition response was dose-dependent. One of the species tested, S. alba, contained a possible oviposition deterrent.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Antibodies against the calcium-binding protein. Calsequestrin from Streptanthus tortuosus (Brassicaceae)
1989
Chou, M. | Krause, K.H. | Campbell, K.P. | Jensen, K.G. | Sjolund, R.D.
Plant microsomes contain a protein clearly related to a calcium-binding protein, calsequestrin, originally found in the sarcoplastic plasmic reticulum of muscle cells, responsible for the rapid release and uptake of Ca2+ within the cells. The location and role of calsequestrin in plant cells is unknown. To generate monoclonal antibodies specific to plant calsequestrin, mice were immunized with a microsomal fraction from cultured cells of Streptanthus tortuosus (Brassicaceae). Two clones cross-reacted with one protein band with a molecular weight equal to that of calsequestrin (57 kilodaltons) by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting. This band is able to bind Ca2, and can be recognized by a polyclonal antibody against the canine cardiac muscle calsequestrin. Rabbit skeletal muscle calsequestrin cross-reacted with the plant monoclonal antibodies. The plant monoclonal antibodies generated here are specific to calsequestrin protein.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]The effect of glucosinolates on responses of young Phyllotreta nemorum larvae to non-host plants النص الكامل
1989
Nielsen, Jens Kvist
All recorded host plants of Phyllotreta nemorum L. (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) contain glucosinolates and belong to the plant families Brassicaceae (Cruciferae), Resedaceae and Capparaceae. The acceptability of 56 plant species from 28 other plant families (non-hosts) for young larvae has been studied in the laboratory. None of these species were fully acceptable for initiations of leaf mines when intact untreated leaves were presented, and only one species, Malva silvestris L. (Malvaceae), was partially acceptable. The acceptability of some species increased when leaf discs were presented instead of intact leaves; but the highest percentages of mine initiations occurred in leaf discs treated with the glucosinolate, sinigrin. A stimulatory effect of sinigrin could be demonstrated in experiments with 7 plant species: Papaver dubium L., Papayer rhoeas L., Fumaria officinalis L., Malva silvestris L., Pisum sativum L., Campanula latifolia L. and Lactuca sativa L. The majority of species remained unacceptable even after treatment with glucosinolates. The main causes for these differences between plant species are supposed to be differences in contents of deterrents and/or other stimulants for mine initiation. These possibilities are discussed in relation to the content of allelochemicals in acceptable plants and the position of these plants in botanical classifications.
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