Fumihiro Terami
National Agriculture and Food Research Organization
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Publication
Featured researches published by Fumihiro Terami.
Journal of General Plant Pathology | 2010
Yuichiro Iida; Yasuya Iwadate; Masaharu Kubota; Fumihiro Terami
Leaf mold symptoms were found on tomato varieties carrying the Cf-9 resistance gene against Passalora fulva, the causal agent of leaf mold, in Japan in 2008. Disease symptoms and morphological characteristics of the isolates were similar to those of P. fulva. After inoculating a set of tomato differentials with the isolates, all isolates were identified as race 2.9 of P. fulva, previously unreported.
Journal of Plant Physiology | 2009
Takahiro Gondo; Jun Matsumoto; Shin-ichi Tsuruta; Midori Yoshida; Akira Kawakami; Fumihiro Terami; Masumi Ebina; Toshihiko Yamada; Ryo Akashi
Rhodes grass (Chloris gayana) is one of the most important warm-season forage grasses. It is cultivated in tropical and subtropical parts of the world and is mostly used for grazing and hay production. We have established a particle-bombardment transformation protocol for rhodes grass using multiple-shoot clumps (MSCs) as the target tissue. A vector pAHC25 containing a herbicide-resistance gene (bar) together with the beta-glucuronidase (GUS) gene was used in transformation experiments. The most efficient recovery of bialaphos-resistant tissue was achieved when the bombarded MSCs were first cultured for 15 d on bialaphos-free medium before being subjected to selection pressure. The resistant tissues regenerated transgenic plants that displayed GUS gene expression. Under optimized conditions, 251 target pieces yielded 46 transgenic plants from 4 independent transgenic lines.
MicrobiologyOpen | 2013
Kazuki Fujiwara; Yuichiro Iida; Takashi Iwai; Chihiro Aoyama; Ryuya Inukai; Akinori Ando; Jun Ogawa; Jun Ohnishi; Fumihiro Terami; Masao Takano; Makoto Shinohara
The rhizosphere microbial community in a hydroponics system with multiple parallel mineralization (MPM) can potentially suppress root‐borne diseases. This study focused on revealing the biological nature of the suppression against Fusarium wilt disease, which is caused by the fungus Fusarium oxysporum, and describing the factors that may influence the fungal pathogen in the MPM system. We demonstrated that the rhizosphere microbiota that developed in the MPM system could suppress Fusarium wilt disease under in vitro and greenhouse conditions. The microbiological characteristics of the MPM system were able to control the population dynamics of F. oxysporum, but did not eradicate the fungal pathogen. The roles of the microbiological agents underlying the disease suppression and the magnitude of the disease suppression in the MPM system appear to depend on the microbial density. F. oxysporum that survived in the MPM system formed chlamydospores when exposed to the rhizosphere microbiota. These results suggest that the microbiota suppresses proliferation of F. oxysporum by controlling the pathogens morphogenesis and by developing an ecosystem that permits coexistence with F. oxysporum.
Journal of General Plant Pathology | 2011
Jun Ohnishi; Toshio Kitamura; Fumihiro Terami; Ken-ichiro Honda
The ability of the whitefly Bemisia tabaci to transmit two strains of Tomato yellow leaf curl virus, the Israel and Mild strains, was studied after serial transfers of individual whiteflies that were viruliferous for both strains to tomato plants. After single whiteflies had successive acquisition feedings first on a single plant infected with one strain and then on a plant infected with the other strain, the single whiteflies later transmitted intermittently one, the other, or both strains to the test plants during serial transfers at 1-day intervals. Because both strains were found in the head, abdomen, and legs dissected from whiteflies during the retention period after the two successive acquisition feedings, both strains apparently circulate from midgut cells to salivary glands through the hemolymph.
Journal of General Plant Pathology | 2011
Masaharu Kubota; Kazufumi Nishi; Emi Kato; Fumihiro Terami
In July 2006, black rot was observed on the leaves of 4-leaf-stage seedlings of salt-wort (Salsola komarovii) in Yamagata Prefecture, Japan. We isolated two single-conidial isolates from the diseased leaves. Although colony appearance of the isolates was different from that of each other, both isolates were identified as Colletotrichum truncatum by morphology and molecular similarity. After inoculation of healthy salt-wort plants with the isolates, the isolates were reisolated from symptomatic plants. We thus propose a new disease, anthracnose of salt-wort.
Journal of General Plant Pathology | 2009
Jun Ohnishi; Toshio Kitamura; Fumihiro Terami; Ken-ichiro Honda
Grassland Science | 2013
Melody Muguerza; Takahiro Gondo; Midori Yoshida; Akira Kawakami; Fumihiro Terami; Toshihiko Yamada; Ryo Akashi
Journal of Phytopathology | 2016
Kazuki Fujiwara; Yuichiro Iida; Nobutaka Someya; Masao Takano; Jun Ohnishi; Fumihiro Terami; Makoto Shinohara
Archive | 1999
Akira Kawakami; Midori Kuriki; Fumihiro Terami; 文宏 寺見; 顕 川上; みどり 栗木
Archive | 2000
Naoki Morita; Tamotsu Hoshino; Michiko Takagi Sawada; Hidetoshi Okuyama; Midori Kuriki; Akira Kawakami; Fumihiro Terami