Carl Greve
University of California, Davis
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Featured researches published by Carl Greve.
Plant Physiology | 2011
Qiang Sun; Carl Greve; John M. Labavitch
Symptom development of Pierce’s disease (PD) in grapevine (Vitis vinifera) depends largely on the ability of the bacterium Xylella fastidiosa to use cell wall-degrading enzymes (CWDEs) to break up intervessel pit membranes (PMs) and spread through the vessel system. In this study, an immunohistochemical technique was developed to analyze pectic and hemicellulosic polysaccharides of intervessel PMs. Our results indicate that PMs of grapevine genotypes with different PD resistance differed in the composition and structure of homogalacturonans (HGs) and xyloglucans (XyGs), the potential targets of the pathogen’s CWDEs. The PMs of PD-resistant grapevine genotypes lacked fucosylated XyGs and weakly methyl-esterified HGs (ME-HGs), and contained a small amount of heavily ME-HGs. In contrast, PMs of PD-susceptible genotypes all had substantial amounts of fucosylated XyGs and weakly ME-HGs, but lacked heavily ME-HGs. The intervessel PM integrity and the pathogen’s distribution in Xylella-infected grapevines also showed differences among the genotypes. In pathogen-inoculated, PD-resistant genotypes PM integrity was well maintained and Xylella cells were only found close to the inoculation site. However, in inoculated PD-susceptible genotypes, PMs in the vessels associated with bacteria lost their integrity and the systemic presence of the X. fastidiosa pathogen was confirmed. Our analysis also provided a relatively clear understanding of the process by which intervessel PMs are degraded. All of these observations support the conclusion that weakly ME-HGs and fucosylated XyGs are substrates of the pathogen’s CWDEs and their presence in or absence from PMs may contribute to grapevine’s PD susceptibility.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1988
Carl Greve; William Opsahl; Karen M. Reiser; Ursula K. Abbott; Cristina Kenney; Daniel R. Benson; Robert B. Rucker
The amounts of lysine-derived crosslinks in collagens from tendon, cartilage, intervertebral disc, and bone and changes in the composition of sternal cartilage glycosaminoglycans were estimated in two lines of chickens, a control-isogenic line and a line that develops scoliosis. In the scoliotic line, scoliosis first appears at 3-4 weeks and progressively increases in severity and incidence so that 90% of the birds express the lesion by week 10. We have reported previously that cartilage, tendon, and bone collagens from scoliotic birds are more soluble than corresponding collagens from normal birds. Herein, collagen crosslinking and altered proteoglycan metabolism are examined as possible mechanisms for the differences in collagen solubility. At 1 week of age there were fewer reducible crosslinking amino acids (hydroxylysinonorleucine, dihydroxylysinonorleucine, and lysinonorleucine) in collagens from sternal cartilage and tendon in the scoliotic line than in the isogenic line. However, by week 3 and at weeks 5 or 7 values were similar in both groups. The amounts of hydroxypyridinium in vertebral bone and intervertebral disc collagen were also similar in both groups of birds. Consequently, differences in collagen crosslinking do not appear to be a persistent developmental defect underlying the expression of scoliosis in the model. However, differences were observed in cartilage proteoglycans and glycosaminoglycans from the scoliotic line that were not present in cartilage from the isogenic line. The average molecular weight of the uronide-containing glycosaminoglycans was 30% less in the scoliotic line than in the isogenic line, i.e., 12,000 compared to 18,000. The size distribution of cartilage proteoglycans from the scoliotic line also differed from that of proteoglycans from the isogenic line.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Molecular Plant Pathology | 2005
Cecilia B. Agüero; Sandra L. Uratsu; Carl Greve; Ann L. T. Powell; John M. Labavitch; Carole P. Meredith; Abhaya M. Dandekar
Plant Physiology | 1991
Kenneth A. Shackel; Carl Greve; John M. Labavitch; Hamid Ahmadi
Postharvest Biology and Technology | 2009
J. Adriana Sañudo-Barajas; John M. Labavitch; Carl Greve; Tomás Osuna-Enciso; Dolores Muy-Rangel; Jorge Siller-Cepeda
Physiologia Plantarum | 2003
Nacer Bellaloui; Ram C. Yadavc; Mawsheng Chern; Hening Hu; Anne M. Gillen; Carl Greve; Abhaya M. Dandekar; Pamela C. Ronald; Patrick H. Brown
American Journal of Veterinary Research | 1999
Stanley L. Marks; Audrey K. Cook; Rachel Reader; Philip H. Kass; Alain P. Théon; Carl Greve; Quinton R. Rogers
Journal of Nutrition | 1987
Carl Greve; Eric Trachtenberg; William Opsahl; Ursula K. Abbott; Robert B. Rucker
Revista Fitotecnia Mexicana | 2008
J. Adriana Sañudo Barajas; Jorge Siller Cepeda; Tomás Osuna Enciso; Dolores Muy Rangel; Guadalupe López Álvarez; Juan Alberto Osuna Castro; Carl Greve; John M. Labavitch
Archive | 2008
Frutos De Papaya; J. Adriana Sañudo Barajas; Jorge Siller Cepeda; Tomás Osuna Enciso; Dolores Muy Rangel; Guadalupe López Álvarez; Juan Alberto Osuna Castro; Carl Greve; John M. Labavitch