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The cultivation of rice in Japan has suffered from damage caused by
baka nae disease, in which rice seedlings show abnormal growth
(elongation) as the result of infection by a plant pathogen.
Investigation of the taxonomy of this pathogen led to the
commencement of gibberellin (GA) research among Japanese plant
pathologists, who later identified it as Gibberella jujikuroi, its
other name being Fusarium moniliforme. In 1926, Kurosawa demon
strated the occurrence of an active principle in the culture media
of fungus that showed the same symptoms as those of the rice
disease. In 1938, this finding was followed by the successful
isolation of the active principles as crystals from the culture
filtrate. This was achieved by the Japanese agri cultural chemists
Yabuta and Sumiki, of The University of Tokyo, who named these
active principles gibberellins A and B. Following World War II,
this discovery attracted the interest of scientists around the
world, and research on GA was pursued on a worldwide scale. One of
the most outstanding discoveries in GA research after the isolation
of GA as the metabolite of the plant pathogen must be the isolation
and characterization of GAs from tissues of higher plants by the
MacMillan group, West and Phinney, and the Tokyo University group
in 1958 and 1959. Thus, GAs have been recognized as one of the most
important classes of plant hormones."
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