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7
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237
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Introduction
Additional affiliations
April 2020 - present
Hayashibara
Position
- Researcher
February 2014 - October 2014
Education
April 2017 - March 2020
April 2015 - March 2017
July 2009 - June 2013
Publications
Publications (7)
Previously, we have reported the ability of a symptomless hypovirus Cryphonectria hypovirus 4 (CHV4) of the chestnut blight fungus to facilitate stable infection by a co-infecting mycoreovirus 2 (MyRV2)—likely through the inhibitory effect of CHV4 on RNA silencing (Aulia et al., Virology, 2019). In this study, the N-terminal portion of the CHV4 pol...
The ascomycete Cryphonectria parasitica causes destructive chestnut blight. Biological control of the fungus by virus infection (hypovirulence) has been shown to be an effective control strategy against chestnut blight in Europe. To provide biocontrol effects, viruses must be able to induce hypovirulence and spread efficiently in chestnut trees. Fi...
The filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa is used as a model organism for genetics, developmental biology and molecular biology. Remarkably, it is not known to host or to be susceptible to infection with any viruses. Here, we identify diverse RNA viruses in N. crassa and other Neurospora species, and show that N. crassa supports the replication of t...
The ascomycete Cryphonectria parasitica has served as a model filamentous fungus for studying virus host interactions becaue of its susceptability to diverse viruses, its genetic manipulability and the availability of many biological and molecuar tools. C. prasitica is known to activate antiviral RNA silencing upon infection by some viruses via tra...
Field-collected US strain C18 of Cryphonectria parasitica, the chestnut blight fungus, was earlier reported to be infected by a double-stranded RNA virus, mycoreovirus 2 (MyRV2). Next-generation sequencing has revealed co-infection of C18 by a positive-strand RNA virus, hypovirus 4 (CHV4). The current molecular and genetic analyses showed interesti...
Plant-associated fungi are infected by viruses at the incidence rates from a few % to over 90%. Multiple viruses often coinfect fungal hosts, and occasionally alter their phenotypes, but most of the infections are asymptomatic. Phenotypic alterations are grouped into two types: harmful or beneficial to the host fungi. Harmful interactions between v...
Rauvolfia serpentina, family Apocynaceae, is widely cultivated in Asia such as India and adjoining countries for the production of roots used in several herbal formulations. In Indonesia, R. serpentina mostly are still as wild crops which grow at the forest in Java, Kalimantan and other islands. In Yogyakarta, some R. serpentina planted in experime...
Questions
Questions (2)
In C.elegans the role of AGL seem to have more function in RNA silencing, but in fungi the role of DCL tend to be more crucial. How can I determine it? What method can I use?
My Supervisor always ask me to keep or maintain the A260 more than 20. Why it is so important? Can we just count it by the concentration of nucleid acid?