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This treatise is focused on early aspects of fungal pathogenesis in
plant and animal hosts. Our aim in choosing the topics and
contributors was to demonstrate common approaches to studies of
fungal-plant and fungal-animal interactions, particularly at the
biochemical and molecular Ievels. For example, the initial events
of adh"sion of fungal spores to the exposed surface tissues of the
host are essential for subsequent invasion of the plant or animal
and establishment of pathogenesis. A point of consensus among
investigators who have directed their attention to such events in
plants, insects, and vertebrates isthat spore adhesion to the host
cuticle or epithelium is more than a simple binding event. lt is a
complex and potentially pivotal process in fungal-plant
interactions which "may involve the secretion of ftuids that
prepare the infection court for the development of morphological
stages of the germling" and subsequent invasion of the host
(Nicholson and Epstein, Chapter 1). The attachment of the fungal
propagule to the arthropod cuticle is also "mediated by the
chemical components present on the outer layer of the spore wall
and the epicuticle . . . . Initial attachment may be reinforced
further by either the active secretion of adhesive materials or the
modification of spore wall materiallocated at the [fungal spore
arthropod] cuticle interface (Boucias and Pendland, Chapter 5).
This treatise is focused on early aspects of fungal pathogenesis in
plant and animal hosts. Our aim in choosing the topics and
contributors was to demonstrate common approaches to studies of
fungal-plant and fungal-animal interactions, particularly at the
biochemical and molecular Ievels. For example, the initial events
of adh"sion of fungal spores to the exposed surface tissues of the
host are essential for subsequent invasion of the plant or animal
and establishment of pathogenesis. A point of consensus among
investigators who have directed their attention to such events in
plants, insects, and vertebrates isthat spore adhesion to the host
cuticle or epithelium is more than a simple binding event. lt is a
complex and potentially pivotal process in fungal-plant
interactions which "may involve the secretion of ftuids that
prepare the infection court for the development of morphological
stages of the germling" and subsequent invasion of the host
(Nicholson and Epstein, Chapter 1). The attachment of the fungal
propagule to the arthropod cuticle is also "mediated by the
chemical components present on the outer layer of the spore wall
and the epicuticle . . . . Initial attachment may be reinforced
further by either the active secretion of adhesive materials or the
modification of spore wall materiallocated at the [fungal spore
arthropod] cuticle interface (Boucias and Pendland, Chapter 5).
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