All Stories

  1. Endophytic Trichoderma spp. can protect strawberry and privet plants from infection by the fungus Armillaria mellea
  2. Viral inosine triphosphatase: A mysterious enzyme with typical activity, but an atypical function
  3. Bovistol B, bovistol D and strossmayerin: Sesquiterpene metabolites from the culture filtrate of the basidiomycete Coprinopsis strossmayeri
  4. Utilization of infectious clones to visualize Cassava brown streak virus replication in planta and gain insights into symptom development
  5. Cassava brown streak virus Ham1 protein hydrolyses mutagenic nucleotides and is a necrosis determinant
  6. A guide to the contained use of plant virus infectious clones
  7. Heterologous expression reveals the biosynthesis of the antibiotic pleuromutilin and generates bioactive semi-synthetic derivatives
  8. Improved vectors for Agrobacterium mediated genetic manipulation of Hypholoma spp. and other homobasidiomycetes
  9. A silver bullet in a golden age of functional genomics: the impact of Agrobacterium-mediated transformation of fungi
  10. Cassava brown streak disease: historical timeline, current knowledge and future prospects
  11. Insights into the Classical Genetics of Clitopilus passeckerianus – the Pleuromutilin Producing Mushroom
  12. Beneficial Uses of Genetically Modified Crops
  13. Draft Genome Sequence of the Coprinoid Mushroom Coprinopsis strossmayeri
  14. The effects of surface structure mutations in Arabidopsis thaliana on the polarization of reflections from virus-infected leaves
  15. Natural products from filamentous fungi and production by heterologous expression
  16. Plant virus infections control stomatal development
  17. The good, the bad and the tasty: The many roles of mushrooms
  18. A faster inoculation assay for Armillaria using herbaceous plants
  19. A native promoter and inclusion of an intron is necessary for efficient expression of GFP or mRFP in Armillaria mellea
  20. Functional analysis of Agaricus bisporus serine proteinase 1 reveals roles in utilization of humic rich substrates and adaptation to the leaf-litter ecological niche
  21. Identification and manipulation of the pleuromutilin gene cluster from Clitopilus passeckerianus for increased rapid antibiotic production
  22. The Effects of Plant Virus Infection on Polarization Reflection from Leaves
  23. A reliable in vitro fruiting system for Armillaria mellea for evaluation of Agrobacterium tumefaciens transformation vectors
  24. Evidence for different, host-dependent functioning of Rx against both wild-type and recombinant Pepino mosaic virus
  25. A pathogenicity determinant maps to the N-terminal coat protein region of thePepino mosaic virusgenome
  26. Investigating the role of dicer 2 (dcr2) in gene silencing and the regulation of mycoviruses in Botrytis cinerea
  27. Transcriptomic analysis of the interactions between Agaricus bisporus and Lecanicillium fungicola
  28. Editorial: A swan song
  29. Genome sequence of the button mushroom Agaricus bisporus reveals mechanisms governing adaptation to a humic-rich ecological niche
  30. Top 10 plant pathogenic bacteria in molecular plant pathology
  31. The Top 10 fungal pathogens in molecular plant pathology
  32. The Top 10 fungal pathogens in molecular plant pathology
  33. Top 10 plant viruses in molecular plant pathology
  34. Protease inhibitors clitocypin and macrocypin are differentially expressed within basidiomycete fruiting bodies
  35. Macluravirus‡
  36. Investigating Agrobacterium-Mediated Transformation of Verticillium albo-atrum on Plant Surfaces
  37. Agrobacterium tumefaciens-Mediated Transformation for Investigation of Somatic Recombination in the Fungal Pathogen Armillaria mellea
  38. Aggressive and mild Potato virus Y isolates trigger different specific responses in susceptible potato plants
  39. Improvement of the Coprinopsis cinerea molecular toolkit using new construct design and additional marker genes
  40. Inadvertent gene silencing of argininosuccinate synthase (bcass1) in Botrytis cinerea by the pLOB1 vector system
  41. The pmk1-like mitogen-activated protein kinase from Lecanicillium (Verticillium) fungicola is not required for virulence on Agaricus bisporus
  42. Establishing Molecular Tools for Genetic Manipulation of the Pleuromutilin-Producing Fungus Clitopilus passeckerianus
  43. Investigating pleuromutilin-producing Clitopilus species and related basidiomycetes
  44. Investigating dominant selection markers for Coprinopsis cinerea: a carboxin resistance system and re-evaluation of hygromycin and phleomycin resistance vectors
  45. Characterization of Serine Proteinase Expression in Agaricus bisporus and Coprinopsis cinerea by Using Green Fluorescent Protein and the A. bisporus SPR1 Promoter
  46. RNA-Mediated Gene Silencing of Superoxide Dismutase (bcsod1) inBotrytis cinerea
  47. Oligonucleotide sequences forming short self-complimentary hairpins can expedite the down-regulation of Coprinopsis cinerea genes
  48. Single-step RT real-time PCR for sensitive detection and discrimination of Potato virus Y isolates
  49. Plant Virology Protocols
  50. Expression Microarrays in Plant-Virus Interaction
  51. The pOT and pLOB vector systems: Improving ease of transgene expression in Botrytis cinerea
  52. Investigations into the taxonomy of the mushroom pathogen Verticillium fungicola and its relatives based on sequence analysis of nitrate reductase and ITS regions
  53. Naked Plasmid DNA-Based α-Galactosidase A Gene Transfer Partially Reduces Systemic Accumulation of Globotriaosylceramide in Fabry Mice
  54. Ochratoxin A biosynthetic genes in Aspergillus ochraceus are differentially regulated by pH and nutritional stimuli
  55. Evaluation of Agrobacterium-Mediated Transformation of Agaricus bisporus Using a Range of Promoters Linked to Hygromycin Resistance
  56. Expression of laccase gene lcc1 in Coprinopsis cinerea under control of various basidiomycetous promoters
  57. Efficient GFP expression in the mushrooms Agaricus bisporus and Coprinus cinereus requires introns
  58. Virology Division News: The new plant virus family Flexiviridae and assessment of molecular criteria for species demarcation
  59. Investigating the role of a Verticillium fungicola β-1,6-glucanase during infection of Agaricus bisporus using targeted gene disruption
  60. Potato latent virus: a proposed new species in the genus Carlavirus
  61. PEG-mediated and Agrobacterium-mediated transformation in the mycopathogen Verticillium fungicola
  62. Identification of different isolates of Cassava brown streak virus and development of a diagnostic test
  63. Molecular evidence that the aphid-transmitted Tomato mild mottle virus belongs to the Potyviridae family but not the Potyvirus genus
  64. Molecular characterization of the Cassava brown streak virus coat protein
  65. The Cylindrical Inclusion Gene ofTurnip mosaic virusEncodes a Pathogenic Determinant to the Brassica Resistance GeneTuRB01
  66. Letter from the Editor-in-Chief
  67. Occurrence of two serotypes of sweet potato chlorotic stunt virus in East Africa and their associated differences in coat protein and HSP70 homologue gene sequences
  68. Analysis of a translational enhancer present within the 5′-terminal sequence of the genomic RNA of potato virus S
  69. RNA extraction from virus-diseased sweet potato for reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction analysis
  70. Plant Virology Protocols
  71. Carlavirus Isolation and RNA Extraction
  72. Expression Library Screening
  73. In Vitro Transcription and Translation
  74. 3'-Terminal sequences of the RNA genomes of narcissus latent and Maclura mosaic viruses suggest that they represent a new genus of the Potyviridae.
  75. A CaMV 35S promoter driven cDNA clone of tobacco mosaic virus can infect host plant tissue despite being uninfectious when manually inoculated onto leaves
  76. Deletion analysis of a translational enhancer upstream from the coat protein open reading frame of potato virus S
  77. Book reviews
  78. Maturation-specific translational enhancement mediated by the 5'-UTR of a late pollen transcript
  79. A carlavirus-specific PCR primer and partial nucleotide sequence provides further evidence for the recognition of cowpea mild mottle virus as a whitefly-transmitted carlavirus
  80. Book reviews
  81. The potential exploitation of plant viral translational enhancers in biotechnology for increased gene expression
  82. Analysis of a translational enhancer upstream from the coat protein open reading frame of potato virus S
  83. In vivo characterisation of a translational enhancer upstream from the coat protein open reading frame of potato virus S
  84. Gametophytic and sporophytic expression of an antherspecific Arabidopsis thaliana gene
  85. The 3′-nucleotide sequence of an ordinary strain of potato virus S
  86. Translation of potato virus S RNA in vitro: Evidence of protein processing
  87. The structure and expression of the genome of carlaviruses
  88. Cell-free translation of American hop latent virus RNA
  89. A Brassica napus mRNA expressed specifically in developing microspores
  90. Occurrence of chloroplast ribosome recognition sites within conserved elements of the RNA genomes of carlaviruses
  91. Molecular variation between ordinary and Andean strains of potato virus S
  92. Investigation of the 5? terminal structures of genomic and subgenomic RNAs of potato virus S
  93. Nucleotide sequence of the 7K gene of carnation latent virus
  94. Detection of strains of potato virus S by nucleic acid spot hybridization (NASH)
  95. A comparison of the nucleotide sequence homologies between isolates of the Andean and ordinary strains of potato virus S and their relationship to other carlaviruses
  96. Evidence for the role of subgenomic RNA species in the production of Helenium virus S coat protein during in vitro translation
  97. Nucleotide Sequence of the 3'-Terminal Region of Helenium Virus S RNA
  98. Evidence for the Role of Subgenomic RNAs in the Production of Potato Virus S coat Protein During in Vitro Translation
  99. Macluravirus
  100. Carlavirus
  101. Macluravirus
  102. Carlavirus
  103. Viral Pathogenicity