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About the Magnaporthe oryzae genome
Magnaporthe oryzae (anamorph: Pyricularia grisea) also known as rice blast fungus is an important plant pathogen isolated from rice and a variety of other rice field weeds. It affects all growth stages of the plant with severe damage during the seedling stage. This fungi generates spores that can easily be dispersed by wind and splashing rain. The spores can spend the Winter in rice grains and rice stubble and can infect new crops the following year. Infection is more likely over long periods of rain or high humidity. There are known strains of rice resistant to this disease that may be helpful for it control. Magnaporthe oryzae is the most important rice pathogen worldwide known to occur in 85 countries. Every year, the losses in crops due to rice blast could feed 60 million people. The Magnaporthe oryzae genome was release as part of the Magnaporthe comparative database, it as size of 41.03 Mb and encodes about 12,593 protein-coding genes.
Picture credit: Donald Groth
Taxonomy ID 242507
Data source Broad Institute
Comparative genomics
What can I find? Homologues, gene trees, and whole genome alignments across multiple species.
More about comparative analyses
Phylogenetic overview of gene families
Download alignments (EMF)
Variation
This species currently has no variation database. However you can process your own variants using the Variant Effect Predictor:
Other Data
'Expressed Sequence Tags' (ESTs) from dbEST are aligned to the genome using Exonerate.