Research Papers
«Phaeomoniella chlamydospora»-Grapevine Interaction : Histochemical Reactions to Fungal Infection
Published 2001-12-15
How to Cite
[1]
B. Mori, G. Surico, L. Mugnai, L. Troccoli, and R. Calamassi, “«Phaeomoniella chlamydospora»-Grapevine Interaction : Histochemical Reactions to Fungal Infection”, Phytopathol. Mediterr., vol. 40, no. 4, pp. 400–406, Dec. 2001.
Abstract
Histochemical reactions of one-year-old potted micropropagated vines (rootstock 1103 Paulsen) to inoculation with Phaeomoniella chlamydospora were studied. Microscopic examination of the vine wood showed that the fungus spread through the wood tissue, albeit slowly. Starting from the roots it required nine months to colonise the first 20-25 cm of the grapevine stems. The slow spread of P. chlamydospora is thought to be due to the defence response initiated by the vines: production of tyloses, including accumulation of phenols in the vessels and adjacent tissue, and the deposition of unidentified defence-response substances, probably stilbene-like substances from the cell-wall surrounding the infectionDownloads
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