Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of oomycete.

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • noun nonphotosynthetic fungi that resemble algae and that reproduce by forming oospores; sometimes classified as protoctists

Etymologies

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Examples

  • Fungi and fungal-like microbes known as oomycetes produce effector molecules that penetrate cells and switch off the host's defense system.

    THE MEDICAL NEWS 2010

  • Microbes using this infection mechanism include fungi that are currently causing wheat rust epidemics in Africa and Asia, and a class of parasitic algae, called oomycetes, that resulted in the Irish potato blight of the 19th Century.

    EurekAlert! - Breaking News 2010

  • In addition, in water environments, oomycetes cause destructive diseases in people and animals.

    EurekAlert! - Breaking News 2010

  • The novelty and simplicity of the mechanism used by fungi and oomycetes to insert their effectors into host cells.

    EurekAlert! - Breaking News 2010

  • Also, the binding lipid used by the effectors of fungi and oomycetes had never before been detected on cell surfaces (although it had been detected inside cells).

    EurekAlert! - Breaking News 2010

  • It was previously known that some bacteria, fungi and oomycetes infect plants by slipping effectors that disable immune systems into plant cells.

    EurekAlert! - Breaking News 2010

  • By contrast, the mechanism used by fungi and oomycetes -- neither of which have an injection apparatus -- to slip their effectors into plant cells had not been previously identified before.

    EurekAlert! - Breaking News 2010

  • The discovery that fungi and oomycetes use the same binding mechanism to introduce effectors into plant cells, even though these two classes of microbes are evolutionarily distinct from one another.

    EurekAlert! - Breaking News 2010

  • The researchers also found evidence suggesting that fungi and oomycetes might infect humans and animals through the same newly-discovered mechanism as they use to infect plants.

    EurekAlert! - Breaking News 2010

  • This finding opens new potential avenues for developing therapies for fighting diseases caused by fungi and oomycetes.

    EurekAlert! - Breaking News 2010

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