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1.
Plant Sci ; 313: 111072, 2021 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34763864

RESUMEN

Necrotic and chlorotic symptoms induced during Pyrenophora teres infection in barley leaves indicate a compatible interaction that allows the hemi-biotrophic fungus Pyrenophora teres to colonise the host. However, it is unexplored how this fungus affects the physiological responses of resistant and susceptible cultivars during infection. To assess the degree of resistance in four different cultivars, we quantified visible symptoms and fungal DNA and performed expression analyses of genes involved in plant defence and ROS scavenging. To obtain insight into the interaction between fungus and host, we determined the activity of 19 key enzymes of carbohydrate and antioxidant metabolism. The pathogen impact was also phenotyped non-invasively by sensor-based multireflectance and -fluorescence imaging. Symptoms, regulation of stress-related genes and pathogen DNA content distinguished the cultivar Guld as being resistant. Severity of net blotch symptoms was also strongly correlated with the dynamics of enzyme activities already within the first day of infection. In contrast to the resistant cultivar, the three susceptible cultivars showed a higher reflectance over seven spectral bands and higher fluorescence intensities at specific excitation wavelengths. The combination of semi high-throughput physiological and molecular analyses with non-invasive phenotyping enabled the identification of bio-signatures that discriminates the resistant from susceptible cultivars.


Asunto(s)
Ascomicetos/patogenicidad , Resistencia a la Enfermedad/genética , Susceptibilidad a Enfermedades , Hordeum/genética , Hordeum/microbiología , Enfermedades de las Plantas/microbiología , Productos Agrícolas/genética , Productos Agrícolas/microbiología , Regulación de la Expresión Génica de las Plantas , Genes de Plantas , Variación Genética , Genotipo , Fenotipo , Sitios de Carácter Cuantitativo
2.
Annu Rev Plant Biol ; 72: 823-846, 2021 06 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34143648

RESUMEN

The foliar microbiome can extend the host plant phenotype by expanding its genomic and metabolic capabilities. Despite increasing recognition of the importance of the foliar microbiome for plant fitness, stress physiology, and yield, the diversity, function, and contribution of foliar microbiomes to plant phenotypic traits remain largely elusive. The recent adoption of high-throughput technologies is helping to unravel the diversityand spatiotemporal dynamics of foliar microbiomes, but we have yet to resolve their functional importance for plant growth, development, and ecology. Here, we focus on the processes that govern the assembly of the foliar microbiome and the potential mechanisms involved in extended plant phenotypes. We highlight knowledge gaps and provide suggestions for new research directions that can propel the field forward. These efforts will be instrumental in maximizing the functional potential of the foliar microbiome for sustainable crop production.


Asunto(s)
Microbiota , Ecología , Fenotipo , Desarrollo de la Planta , Plantas
3.
Lancet Planet Health ; 5(1): e50-e62, 2021 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33306994

RESUMEN

Food system innovations will be instrumental to achieving multiple Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). However, major innovation breakthroughs can trigger profound and disruptive changes, leading to simultaneous and interlinked reconfigurations of multiple parts of the global food system. The emergence of new technologies or social solutions, therefore, have very different impact profiles, with favourable consequences for some SDGs and unintended adverse side-effects for others. Stand-alone innovations seldom achieve positive outcomes over multiple sustainability dimensions. Instead, they should be embedded as part of systemic changes that facilitate the implementation of the SDGs. Emerging trade-offs need to be intentionally addressed to achieve true sustainability, particularly those involving social aspects like inequality in its many forms, social justice, and strong institutions, which remain challenging. Trade-offs with undesirable consequences are manageable through the development of well planned transition pathways, careful monitoring of key indicators, and through the implementation of transparent science targets at the local level.


Asunto(s)
Industria de Alimentos , Invenciones , Desarrollo Sostenible , Agricultura , Inteligencia Artificial , Femenino , Salud Global , Objetivos , Humanos , Masculino , Innovación Organizacional , Política Pública , Factores Socioeconómicos
4.
Ecol Appl ; 26(5): 1352-1369, 2016 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27755749

RESUMEN

Weed management is a critically important activity on both agricultural and non-agricultural lands, but it is faced with a daunting set of challenges: environmental damage caused by control practices, weed resistance to herbicides, accelerated rates of weed dispersal through global trade, and greater weed impacts due to changes in climate and land use. Broad-scale use of new approaches is needed if weed management is to be successful in the coming era. We examine three approaches likely to prove useful for addressing current and future challenges from weeds: diversifying weed management strategies with multiple complementary tactics, developing crop genotypes for enhanced weed suppression, and tailoring management strategies to better accommodate variability in weed spatial distributions. In all three cases, proof-of-concept has long been demonstrated and considerable scientific innovations have been made, but uptake by farmers and land managers has been extremely limited. Impediments to employing these and other ecologically based approaches include inadequate or inappropriate government policy instruments, a lack of market mechanisms, and a paucity of social infrastructure with which to influence learning, decision-making, and actions by farmers and land managers. We offer examples of how these impediments are being addressed in different parts of the world, but note that there is no clear formula for determining which sets of policies, market mechanisms, and educational activities will be effective in various locations. Implementing new approaches for weed management will require multidisciplinary teams comprised of scientists, engineers, economists, sociologists, educators, farmers, land managers, industry personnel, policy makers, and others willing to focus on weeds within whole farming systems and land management units.


Asunto(s)
Conservación de los Recursos Naturales/métodos , Malezas , Control de Malezas/métodos , Agricultura/economía , Agricultura/métodos , Productos Agrícolas/genética , Productos Agrícolas/fisiología , Resistencia a los Herbicidas , Herbicidas , Especies Introducidas , Malezas/efectos de los fármacos , Factores de Tiempo
6.
J Exp Bot ; 66(18): 5429-40, 2015 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26163702

RESUMEN

Plants are affected by complex genome×environment×management interactions which determine phenotypic plasticity as a result of the variability of genetic components. Whereas great advances have been made in the cost-efficient and high-throughput analyses of genetic information and non-invasive phenotyping, the large-scale analyses of the underlying physiological mechanisms lag behind. The external phenotype is determined by the sum of the complex interactions of metabolic pathways and intracellular regulatory networks that is reflected in an internal, physiological, and biochemical phenotype. These various scales of dynamic physiological responses need to be considered, and genotyping and external phenotyping should be linked to the physiology at the cellular and tissue level. A high-dimensional physiological phenotyping across scales is needed that integrates the precise characterization of the internal phenotype into high-throughput phenotyping of whole plants and canopies. By this means, complex traits can be broken down into individual components of physiological traits. Since the higher resolution of physiological phenotyping by 'wet chemistry' is inherently limited in throughput, high-throughput non-invasive phenotyping needs to be validated and verified across scales to be used as proxy for the underlying processes. Armed with this interdisciplinary and multidimensional phenomics approach, plant physiology, non-invasive phenotyping, and functional genomics will complement each other, ultimately enabling the in silico assessment of responses under defined environments with advanced crop models. This will allow generation of robust physiological predictors also for complex traits to bridge the knowledge gap between genotype and phenotype for applications in breeding, precision farming, and basic research.


Asunto(s)
Productos Agrícolas/genética , Genoma de Planta , Genómica/métodos , Genotipo , Fenotipo , Fitomejoramiento
7.
Comput Biol Med ; 53: 94-104, 2014 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25129021

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: OvaSpec is a new, fully automated, vision-based instrument for assessing the quantity (concentration) and quality (embryonation percentage) of Trichuris suis parasite eggs in liquid suspension. The eggs constitute the active pharmaceutical ingredient in a medicinal drug for the treatment of immune-mediated diseases such as Crohn׳s disease, ulcerative colitis, and multiple sclerosis. METHODS: This paper describes the development of an automated microscopy technology, including methodological challenges and design decisions of relevance for the future development of comparable vision-based instruments. Morphological properties are used to distinguish eggs from impurities and two features of the egg contents under brightfield and darkfield illumination are used in a statistical classification to distinguish eggs with undifferentiated contents (non-embryonated eggs) from eggs with fully developed larvae inside (embryonated eggs). RESULTS: For assessment of the instrument׳s performance, six egg suspensions of varying quality were used to generate a dataset of unseen images. Subsequently, annotation of the detected eggs and impurities revealed a high agreement with the manual, image-based assessments for both concentration and embryonation percentage (both error rates <1.0%). Similarly, a strong correlation was demonstrated in a final, blinded comparison with traditional microscopic assessments performed by an experienced laboratory technician. CONCLUSIONS: The present study demonstrates the applicability of computer vision in the production, analysis, and quality control of T. suis eggs used as an active pharmaceutical ingredient for the treatment of autoimmune diseases.


Asunto(s)
Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador/métodos , Microscopía/métodos , Parasitología/métodos , Trichuris/citología , Animales , Productos Biológicos/normas , Heces/parasitología , Estadios del Ciclo de Vida/fisiología , Suspensiones , Porcinos , Porcinos Enanos
8.
Plant Cell Environ ; 36(11): 1919-25, 2013 Nov.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23534680

RESUMEN

This paper is part review and part opinion piece; it has three parts of increasing novelty and speculation in approach. The first presents an overview of how some of the major crop simulation models approach the issue of simulating the responses of crops to changing climatic and weather variables, mainly atmospheric CO2 concentration and increased and/or varying temperatures. It illustrates an important principle in models of a single cause having alternative effects and vice versa. The second part suggests some features, mostly missing in current crop models, that need to be included in the future, focussing on extreme events such as high temperature or extreme drought. The final opinion part is speculative but novel. It describes an approach to deconstruct resource use efficiencies into their constituent identities or elements based on the Kaya-Porter identity, each of which can be examined for responses to climate and climatic change. We give no promise that the final part is 'correct', but we hope it can be a stimulation to thought, hypothesis and experiment, and perhaps a new modelling approach.


Asunto(s)
Productos Agrícolas/fisiología , Modelos Biológicos , Biomasa , Dióxido de Carbono/farmacología , Cambio Climático , Productos Agrícolas/efectos de los fármacos
9.
Ugeskr Laeger ; 170(35): 2708, 2008 Aug 25.
Artículo en Danés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18761865

RESUMEN

We report a case of intestinal perforation due to manual reduction of incarcerated inguinal hernia. Explorative laparotomy was delayed and first attempted after 21 hours. The patient died as a result of peritonitis. If conservative treatment of incarcerated inguinal hernia is considered, this should be done with caution. When successful, possibility of reduction of non-vital organ should be eliminated. Patient must be informed about symptoms and risks, otherwise hospitalisation can be considered.


Asunto(s)
Hernia Inguinal/terapia , Anciano , Resultado Fatal , Humanos , Perforación Intestinal/etiología , Intestino Delgado/patología , Masculino , Peritonitis/etiología , Factores de Riesgo
10.
Bull. W.H.O. (Print) ; 43(4): 521-537, 1970.
Artículo en Inglés | WHO IRIS | ID: who-262557
11.
Bull. W.H.O. (Print) ; 43(4): 539-552, 1970.
Artículo en Inglés | WHO IRIS | ID: who-262541
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