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  • 1
    ISSN: 0021-9541
    Keywords: Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: The calcium uptake and ATPase activities of isolated sarcoplasmic reticulum were studied during the first six days of chick skeletal muscle maturation in tissue culture. Statistically significant increases in these activities were observed between the second and the sixth day of maturation. Increases in oxalate-dependent calcium uptake were demonstrated at concentrations of 2.5 × 10-5 M calcium and 10-4 M calcium. Calcium-binding determinations conducted in the absence of oxalate displayed changes manifested by an increase at day 5 followed by a significant decrease at day 6. Increases in total ATPase activity during maturation paralleled the sequential increases in calcium uptake. Calcium-stimulated ATPase activity, however, did not change significantly during periods of marked increase in calcium uptake, suggesting that these activities are dissociated during development of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. These data demonstrate that calcium uptake and total ATPase activity increase during muscle maturation in tissue culture and that these activities are present prior to spontaneous contractions.
    Additional Material: 2 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2016-03-22
    Description: Investigating the origin and dispersal pathways is instrumental to mitigate threats and economic and environmental consequences of invasive crop pathogens. In the case of Puccinia striiformis causing yellow rust on wheat, a number of economically important invasions have been reported, e.g., the spreading of two aggressive and high temperature adapted strains to three continents since 2000. The combination of sequence-characterized amplified region (SCAR) markers, which were developed from two specific AFLP fragments, differentiated the two invasive strains, Pst S1 and Pst S2 from all other P. striiformis strains investigated at a worldwide level. The application of the SCAR markers on 566 isolates showed that Pst S1 was present in East Africa in the early 1980s and then detected in the Americas in 2000 and in Australia in 2002. Pst S2 which evolved from PstS1 became widespread in the Middle East and Central Asia. In 2000, Pst S2 was detected in Europe, where it never became prevalent. Additional SSR genotyping and virulence phenotyping revealed 10 and six variants, respectively, within PstS1 and PstS2, demonstrating the evolutionary potential of the pathogen. Overall, the results suggested East Africa as the most plausible origin of the two invasive strains. The SCAR markers developed in the present study provide a rapid, inexpensive, and efficient tool to track the distribution of P. striiformis invasive strains, PstS1 and PstS2 . The study reports on the development and application of two strain-specific SCAR markers for tracking the distribution of invasive and high temperature adapted strains of the wheat yellow rust fungus, P. striiformis . We were also able to identify East Africa as the most likely origin of the aggressive strains. The worldwide spread and establishment of the two invasive strains is addressed in the context of epidemic outbreaks of yellow rust disease and deployment of host resistance.
    Electronic ISSN: 2045-7758
    Topics: Biology
    Published by Wiley-Blackwell
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