Artículo
Nuclear acridine orange fluorescence in Rhizoctonia isolates from rice
Observación de núcleos de aislamientos de Rhizoctonia de arroz por fluorescencia con naranja de acridina
Fecha
2015-06Registro en:
Barrera, Viviana A.; et al., 2015. Nuclear acridine orange fluorescence in Rhizoctonia isolates from rice. Revista Argentina de Microbiología, Buenos Aires: Asociación Argentina de Microbiología, vol. 47, no. 2, p. 167-169. ISSN 0325-7541.
0325-7541
Autor
Barrera, Viviana A.
Gutiérrez, Susana Alejandra
Cúndom, María Águeda
Gasoni, Amelia L.
Institución
Resumen
The genus Rhizoctonia DC (1805) has long been studied as
an important soilborne pathogen that causes a wide variety of symptoms because it is a non-specialized pathogen3.
Rhizoctonia sensu lato is characterized by the lack of conidiogenous cells and this taxon is composed of two groups
based on the number of nuclei per cell: the multinucleate
group that belongs to Rhizoctonia s. str. and the binucleate
group that belongs to Ceratorhiza5. Currently, other authors
consider the group a Ceratobasidium---Rhizoctonia complex7
and divide it into two groups: BNR (binucleate Rhizoctonialike) and MNR (multinucleate Rhizoctonia-like)9. Many
methods are used to observe the number of nuclei in fungal cells, e.g. safranine O, aniline blue, HCl-Giemsa. Some
of these methods apply a staining solution involving laborious, time-consuming procedures that require no equipment.