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Alicia G. Luque

Researcher at National University of Rosario

Publications -  46
Citations -  648

Alicia G. Luque is an academic researcher from National University of Rosario. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cercospora sojina & Potato dextrose agar. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 46 publications receiving 530 citations.

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Phylogenomic Analysis of a 55.1-kb 19-Gene Dataset Resolves a Monophyletic Fusarium that Includes the Fusarium solani Species Complex.

David M. Geiser, +167 more
- 09 Sep 2021 - 
TL;DR: The practical and scientific argument in support of a Fusarium that includes the FSSC and several other basal lineages is reasserted, consistent with the longstanding use of this name among plant pathologists, medical mycologists, quarantine officials, regulatory agencies, students and researchers with a stake in its taxonomy.
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Soybean Sudden Death Syndrome Species Diversity Within North and South America Revealed by Multilocus Genotyping

TL;DR: A high-throughput multilocus genotyping (MLGT) assay was developed which accurately differentiated the soybean SDS and two closely related Phaseolus and mung BRR pathogens based on nucleotide polymorphism within the nuclear ribosomal intergenic spacer region rDNA and two anonymous intergenic regions designated locus 51 and 96.
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Oral yeast carriage in HIV‐infected and non‐infected populations in Rosario, Argentina

TL;DR: The presence of Candida species, resistant to commonly used antifungal agents, represents a potential risk in immunocompromised patients.
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Metabolic profiles of soybean roots during early stages of Fusarium tucumaniae infection

TL;DR: Results indicate that the pathogen induced the susceptible plant to accumulate amino acids in roots at early time points after infection, suggesting that GC-MS-based metabolomics could be used for the rapid characterization of cultivar response to SDS.
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Quantification of the potential biocontrol and direct plant growth promotion abilities based on multiple biological traits distinguish different groups of Pseudomonas spp. isolates

TL;DR: A principal component analysis based on the outcome of quantitative and qualitative tests related to biocontrol of fungal pathogens, direct plant growth promotion, and other root colonization-related traits showed that isolates with the highest antagonistic potential were grouped together, whereas rhizospheric isolates and those with strong flagellar-dependent motility, exoprotease production and biofilm development were clustered in a separate group.