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Bean, trichothecenes

Bean, G. A., Fernando, T., Jarvia, B. B., and Bruton, B. 1984. The isolation and identification of trichothecene metabolites from plant pathogenic strains of Myrothecium roridum. J. Nat. Prod. 47, 727-729... [Pg.280]

A detailed study of the effects of exogenously applied macrocylic trichothecenes on intact bean, corn, and tobacco plants recalls that they may induce a variety of responses that are tissue dependent and range from no effect to complete phytotoxicity (H). Initial experiments have conclusively shown that in the etiolated wheat coleoptile bioassay verrucarin A, verrucarin J, and trichoverrin B are exception-... [Pg.58]

Bean GA, Fernando T, Jarvis BB, Bruton B (1984) The Isolation and Identification of Trichothecene Mycotoxins from a Plant Pathogenic Strain of Myrothecium roridum. J Nat Prod 47 727... [Pg.119]

El-Maghraby OMO, Bean GA, Jarvis BB, Aboul-Nasr MB (1991) Macrocyclic Trichothecenes Produced by Stachybotrys Isolated from Egypt and Eastern Europe. Mycopathologia 113 109... [Pg.119]

Jarvis BB, Midiwo JO, Bean GA, Aboul-Nasr MB, Barros CS (1988) The Mystery of Trichothecene Antibiotics in Baccharis Species. J Nat Prod 51 736... [Pg.122]

Jarvis BB, Lee Y-W, ComezogluFT, ComezogluSN, Bean GA (1985) Myrotoxins A New Class of Macrocyclic Trichothecenes. Tetrahedron Lett 26 4859... [Pg.122]

Jarvis BB,Midiwo JO, TuthillD, Bean GA (1981) Interaction Between the Antibiotic Trichothecenes and the Higher Plant Baccharis megapotamica. Science 214 460... [Pg.123]

Jarvis BB, Wells KM, Lee Y-W, Bean GA, Kommedahl T, Barros CS, Barros SS (1987) Macrocyclic Trichothecene Mycotoxins in Brazilian Species of Baccharis. Phytopathol 77 980... [Pg.123]

Toxins are natural substances that are poisonous. Animals (snake venom), plants (ricin from castor beans), bacteria (botulism toxin), and fungi (trichothecene mycotoxin T2) produce toxins. A man-made chemical substance that is poisonous is called a poison, not a toxin. To be useful as a weapon, a toxin has to be stable enough to be stored and must be producible in sufficient quantities. Some very potent toxins do not lend themselves to weapons use because they cannot be produced in more than minute quantities. [Pg.65]

Jarvis, B. B., J. O. Midiwo, D. Tuthill, and G. A. Bean, Interaction between the antibiotic trichothecenes and the higher plant Baccharis megapotamica. Science, 214, 460-461 (1981). [Pg.395]

Kuti, j. O., B. B. Jarvis, N. Mokhtari-Rejali, and G. A. Bean, Allelochemical regulation of reproduction and seed germination of two Brazilian Baccharis species by phytotoxic trichothecenes, J. Chem. Ecol, 16, 3441-3453 (1990). [Pg.395]

Ueno, Y., K. Ishii, K. Sakai, S. Kanaeda, H. Tsunoda, T. Toshitsugu, and M. Enomoto Microbial survey on bean hulls poisoning of horses with the isolation of toxic trichothecenes, neosolaniol, and T-2 toxin of Fusarium solani. Jpn. J. Exp. Med. 42,187 (1972). [Pg.218]


See other pages where Bean, trichothecenes is mentioned: [Pg.153]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.395]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.128]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.219]    [Pg.222]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.55 ]




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