M
Moshe Lapidot
Researcher at Brigham and Women's Hospital
Publications - 94
Citations - 4408
Moshe Lapidot is an academic researcher from Brigham and Women's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tomato yellow leaf curl virus & Plant virus. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 88 publications receiving 3805 citations. Previous affiliations of Moshe Lapidot include Boston Children's Hospital & Technion – Israel Institute of Technology.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Emerging Viral Diseases of Tomato Crops
TL;DR: Emerging viruses of tomato crops are discussed and several recently described new viruses such as Tomato torrado virus and new Tospovirus species are rapidly spreading over large geographic areas.
Journal ArticleDOI
Breeding for resistance to whitefly‐transmitted geminiviruses
Moshe Lapidot,Michael Friedmann +1 more
TL;DR: This review considers the most severe viral diseases of four major crops (tomato, bean, cassava and cotton) and the approaches taken to breed for resistance to these viral diseases should provide a perspective of the issues involved in breeding for begomovirus resistance in crop plants.
Journal ArticleDOI
Plant virus movement proteins
TL;DR: The movement of virus progeny throughout a host is an active process that can be divided into two broadly defined phases, characterized by cell-to-cell (short-distance) spread of the virus and long-distance movement from an infected tissue to other tissues via the vascular tissue.
Journal ArticleDOI
World Management of Geminiviruses.
Maria R. Rojas,M. A. Macedo,Minor R. Maliano,Maria Soto-Aguilar,J. O. Souza,Rob W. Briddon,Lawrence Kenyon,Rafael Francisco Rivera Bustamante,F. Murilo Zerbini,Scott Adkins,James P. Legg,Anders Kvarnheden,William M. Wintermantel,Mysore R. Sudarshana,Michel Peterschmitt,Moshe Lapidot,Darren P. Martin,Enrique Moriones,Alice K. Inoue-Nagata,Robert L. Gilbertson +19 more
TL;DR: Given the great diversity of the viruses, their insect vectors, and the crops affected, IPM approaches need to be based on the biology and ecology of the virus and vector and the crop production system.