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result(s) for
"Jensen, D.F."
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Expression of the red fluorescent protein DsRed-Express in filamentous ascomycete fungi
by
Mikkelsen, Lisbeth
,
Sarrocco, Sabrina
,
Lübeck, Mette
in
Aspergillus nidulans
,
Biological and medical sciences
,
confocal laser scanning microscopy
2003
The recently reported red fluorescent protein DsRed from the reef coral
Discosoma sp. represents a new marker that has been codon-optimized for high expression in mammalian cells. To facilitate expression of DsRed in ascomycete fungi, we used the clone pDsRed-Express (Clontech) for constructing a plasmid vector, pPgpd-DsRed, containing the constitutive
Aspergillus nidulans glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate (
gpd) promoter. This vector was used for co-transformation of
Penicillium paxilli,
Trichoderma harzianum and
Trichoderma virens (syn.
Gliocladium virens) together with either pAN7-1 or gGFP, both containing a gene for hygromycin resistance for transformant selection. In addition, gGFP contains a green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene for expression in Ascomycetes. Expression of DsRed-Express was obtained in all three fungi, indicating that DsRed can be used as a highly effective vital marker in Ascomycetes. Dual marked transformants expressed both DsRed-Express and GFP in the same mycelium and were used for non-quantitative comparison of the intensity of the fluorescence using confocal laser scanning microscopy.
Journal Article
First report of anthracnose fruit rot caused by Colletotrichum acutatum on strawberry in Denmark
2005
Strawberry (Fragaria x ananassa) is the most important small fruit crop in Denmark. The quarantine pathogen Colletotrichum acutatum was detected for the first time in June 2000 in Denmark in a production field on the island of Falster. Strawberry plants of cv. Kimberly showed typical symptoms of anthracnose fruit rot. On mature fruits, brown-to-black lesions with spore masses that were orange to salmon in color were observed. Mummified berries were also observed. The fungus was isolated and identified on the basis of morphological characteristics, and identification was confirmed using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay at the Central Science Laboratory, York, U.K. Species-specific polymerase chain reaction with the C. acutatum-specific primer pairs acut1/col2 (1) and CaInt2/ITS4 (3) also supported the identification. Additionally, the internal transcribed spacer regions, ITS1 and ITS2, of the ribosomal DNA were sequenced in both directions (GenBank Accession No. AY818361). Homology searches with this sequence using BLAST also confirmed the identity. Colonies grown on potato dextrose agar developed white-to-grey aerial mycelium with salmon-colored spore masses, and were beige to black on the reverse side. Conidia were 11.3 (7.3 to 16.6) μm x 3.9 (2.5 to 5.2) μm, hyaline, cylindrical with at least one pointed end, and aseptate. Mycelial growth rate was 8.4 mm per day at 25°C which is similar to earlier reports (2). Spray-inoculated (10(6) conidia per ml) strawberry fruits cv. Elsanta developed brown, sunken, irregular lesions with salmon-colored acervuli after 2 to 5 days at 25°C. Koch's postulates were fulfilled since the reisolated fungus from these lesions developed the same morphological characteristics as described above. To our knowledge, this is the first report of C. acutatum in Denmark.
Journal Article
Selection of biological control agents for controlling soil and seed-borne diseases in the field
1997
Different screening methods for selection of biological control agents (BCAs), for controlling soil and seed-borne diseases, are discussed. The shortcomings of laboratory methods focused on mechanism of action are discussed and we conclude that these methods should be used with caution if candidates with multifactorial or plant mediated mechanisms of control are to be obtained. In vitro screens may be useful for specific groups of microorganisms, thus, screens for antibiotics may be relevant for Streptomyces spp., and promising results have been obtained using soil plating or precolonized agar methods to screen for mycoparasitism and competitive saprophytic ability. Experience with screening in the Nordic programme 'Biological control of seed borne diseases in cereals' is summarized. Research in the four participating countries - Finland, Sweden, Norway and Denmark - followed the same paradigm: that of obtaining antagonists, well adapted to different Nordic environments, and developing them as effective BCAs. Potential antagonists were isolated from different sources and in planta screening methods were developed in order to optimize selection of antagonists effective against a range of seed borne pathogens. Screens in the laboratory or greenhouse were followed by screening in the field. The different screening procedures are compared and evaluated.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
Journal Article
Endo-1,3-beta-glucanase and cellulase from Trichoderma harzianum: purification and partial characterization, induction of and biological activity against plant pathogenic Pythium spp
by
Thrane, C. (Royal Veterinary and Agricultural Univ., Frederiksberg (Denmark). Dept. of Plant Biology)
,
Jensen, D.F
,
Tronsmo, A
in
ANTAGONISM
,
ANTAGONISME
,
ANTAGONISMO
1997
There were indications that endo-1,3- beta -glucanase (1,3-(1,3; 1,4)- beta -D-Glucan 3(4)-glucanohydrolase (EC 3.2.1.6)) and cellulase (1,4-(1,3; 1,4)- beta -D-Glucan 4-glucanohydrolase (EC 3.2.1.4)) activity of Trichoderma harzianum Rifai isolate T3 were induced in sphagnum peat moss cultivations and dual culture experiments by the presence of Pythium ultimum. Further, P. ultimum stimulated the germination of Trichoderma conidia. Endo-1,3- beta -glucanase and cellulase were purified from T. harzianum isolate T3, known to control Pythium damping-off of cucumber seedlings. The enzymes were purified from the culture filtrate of the fungus by gel filtration and isoelectric focusing. The purified endo-1,3- beta -glucanase was a small protein with a molecular mass of 17 kilodaltons and a pI of 5.0. Two cellulases were purified to homogeneity and had molecular masses of 40 and 45 kilodaltons respectively, and pI's of 6.4 and 7.6 respectively. Germination of encysted zoospores and elongation of germ tubes of a plant pathogenic Pythium isolate were inhibited by low concentrations of the purified enzymes. A strong synergistic effect was observed on the inhibition of cyst germination by a combination of the endo-1,3- beta -glucanase and the fungicide Fongarid. Finally, a time-course study of colonization of the rhizosphere of cucumber seedlings showed that the active fungal mycelial biomass of a GUS-transformant of T. harzianum isolate T3 increased over four weeks. Trichoderma appeared to colonize healthy roots only superficially, whereas the mucilage of the root hairs and of distal parts of wounded areas or broken parts of the roots, were extensively colonized.
Journal Article
Quantum Phase Transition of a Magnet in a Spin Bath
by
Rønnow, H. M
,
McMorrow, D. F
,
Aeppli, G
in
Classical and quantum physics: mechanics and fields
,
Climate
,
Condensed matter: electronic structure, electrical, magnetic, and optical properties
2005
The excitation spectrum of a model magnetic system, LiHoF₄, was studied with the use of neutron spectroscopy as the system was tuned to its quantum critical point by an applied magnetic field. The electronic mode softening expected for a quantum phase transition was forestalled by hyperfine coupling to the nuclear spins. We found that interactions with the nuclear spin bath controlled the length scale over which the excitations could be entangled. This generic result places a limit on our ability to observe intrinsic electronic quantum criticality.
Journal Article
Pionic hydrogen and deuterium
2022
The strong-interaction effects both in pionic hydrogen and deuterium atoms have been re-determined with improved precision. The hadronic shift and width in pionic hydrogen together with the hadronic shift in pionic deuterium constitute a one-fold constraint for the two independent pion-nucleon scattering lengths. Furthermore, the hadronic width in pionic deuterium measures the transition strength of s-wave pions on an isoscalar nucleon-nucleon pair which is an independent quantity not related to the pion-nucleon scattering lengths. The experiment was performed at the Paul Scherrer Institute by stopping a high-intensity low-energy pion beam in gaseous targets using the cyclotron trap. The X-rays emitted by the πH and πD atoms were analysed with a high resolution Bragg spectrometer equipped with spherically bent crystals. The pion-nucleon scattering lengths and other physical quantities extracted from the atom data are in good agreement with the results obtained from pionnucleon and nucleon-nucleon scattering experiments and confirm that a consistent picture is achieved for the low-energy pion-nucleon sector with respect to the expectations of chiral perturbation theory.
Journal Article
In vitro fermentation of various fiber and starch sources by pig fecal inocula
2004
Freeze-dried ileal effluent (1% wt/vol) from cannulated pigs fed rice-based diets with the inclusion of either animal protein (CON), animal protein plus potato starch (PS), animal protein plus sugar beet pulp (SBP), or animal protein plus wheat bran (WB) was incubated anaerobically at pH 6.0 in fermenters containing 5% (wt/vol) fecal slurry comprising mineral salts medium and 50 g/L of fresh feces from pigs fed the same diets as the cannulated pigs. Samples were collected from the fermenters at 0, 2, 4, 12, 24, and 48 h during in vitro fermentation for measuring nonstarch polysaccharides (NSP), starch, and short-chain fatty acids (SCFA). Results showed that the major SCFA produced were acetate, propionate, and butyrate. The inclusion of soluble dietary fiber (diet SBP) caused the highest concentrations of acetate, propionate, butyrate, and total SCFA, whereas the increase in the production of propionate resulting from the addition of insoluble dietary fiber (diet WB) only occurred at the initial stages during 48 h in vitro fermentation. At all sampling occasions (except for 4 h), the levels of butyrate were increased (P < 0.01) by resistant starch compared with fiber sources, showing that a higher level of butyrate can be achieved through microbial fermentation by potato starch. Lowered (P < 0.05) butyrate concentrations were observed with diet WB during in vitro fermentation. With the inclusion of fiber sources, the energy originating from SCFA was similar to that from NSP disappearance, whereas the values were lower (P < 0.05) from NSP disappearance than for SCFA generated without fiber sources supplemented. We conclude that more substrate is available in ileal effluent with the addition of soluble dietary fiber, and an increased level of butyrate could be achieved through microbial fermentation by resistant starch.
Journal Article
A comparison of three visual assessments for riparian and stream health
by
G. G. Markegard
,
T. A. Ward
,
E. R. Atwill
in
Agronomy. Soil science and plant productions
,
Biological and medical sciences
,
Company business management
2003
Visual assessments are integral components of several widely promoted efforts to assess the health of stream and riparian
areas across the Nation. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Habitat Assessment Field Data Sheet (HAFDS), U.S.
Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources Conservation Service's (NRCS) Stream Visual Assessment (SVA), and U.S. Department
of Interior (USDI) Bureau of Land Management's (BLM) Proper Functioning Condition (PFC) assessment were applied to 234 rangeland
riparian areas to determine: 1) how well the assessments correlate, and 2) how site-specific stream and riparian characteristics
affect the outcome of each assessment and thus the comparison of outcomes across stream types. Habitat Assessment Field Data
Sheet and Stream Visual Assessment are habitat driven assessments, which target similar parameters resulting in a strong positive
correlation between these methods (r = 0.81). BLM's Proper Functioning Condition focuses on parameters related to hydrologic
function, thus a weaker correlation was found when comparing Proper Functioning Condition to the Habitat Assessment Field
Data Sheet and the NRCS' Stream Visual Assessment methods (r = 0.58 and 0.54, respectively). A combination of one habitat
assessment and Proper Functioning Condition should be utilized to conduct a comprehensive assessment of riparian/stream health.
Site characteristics, which were significantly associated with assessment outcomes included entrenchment ratio, substrate
size, channel width to depth and slope. This presents a problem in that comparison of assessment outcomes across different
streams and stream reaches are confounded by factors such as slope and substrate type, which may not always be indicative
of riparian/stream health. The Rusgen Stream Morphology Classification system was used to successfully control for the effect
of these site-specific effects on assessment outcome, allowing for comparison of riparian/stream health assessments across
streams.
Journal Article