Nina Mironenko
Russian Academy of Sciences
12 Papers
17 Citations
Nina Mironenko is an academic researcher from Russian Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Globodera pallida. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 12 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Differentiation of the closely related species, Alternaria solani and A. tomatophila, by molecular and morphological features and aggressiveness
TL;DR: This research compared Russian large-spored Alternaria isolates from tomato and potato to test the hypothesis that early blight of Tomato and potato are caused by different species, and found A. solani isolates were equally aggressive on both tomato and Potato, whereas A. tomatophila was highly aggressive to tomato but only weakly aggressive to potato.
73
A microsatellite and morphological assessment of the Russian National cultivated potato collection
Tatjana Gavrilenko,Olga Antonova,Anna Ovchinnikova,Lubov Novikova,Ekaterina Krylova,Nina Mironenko,Galina Pendinen,Anna Islamshina,Natalia Shvachko,Stephan Kiru,Ludmila Kostina,Olga Afanasenko,David M. Spooner +12 more
TL;DR: The purpose of the present study is to obtain morphological, ploidy, and microsatellite (SSR) data needed to set up a useful subset of the collection of cultivated potatoes and closely related wild species, and to use this collection to study cultivated potato taxonomy and phylogeny.
Characterization of resistance to Globodera rostochiensis pathotype Ro1 in cultivated and wild potato species accessions from the Vavilov Institute of Plant Industry
Ludmila Limantseva,Nina Mironenko,Oleg Shuvalov,Olga Antonova,Alexandr Khiutti,Lubov Novikova,Olga Afanasenko,David M. Spooner,Tatjana Gavrilenko +8 more
TL;DR: Seventy-nine accessions of cultivated and closely related wild potato species from the VIR collection in Russia were screened on resistance to G. rostochiensis pathotype Ro1 and on the presence of molecular markers for H1 and Gro1-4 resistance genes, and no associations were detected.
34
Potato resistance to quarantine diseases
TL;DR: This review provides information on the harmfulness of S. endobioticum and GPCN, the quarantine species causing the most widespread and destructive diseases of potato in the Russian Federation and other countries, and the resistance of commercial potato cultivars to them.
Characterization of resistance to Synchytrium endobioticum in cultivated potato accessions from the collection of Vavilov Institute of Plant Industry
Alexander Khiutti,Olga Afanasenko,Olga Antonova,Oleg Shuvalov,Lubov Novikova,Ekaterina Krylova,Nadezhda Chalaya,Nina Mironenko,David M. Spooner,T. Gavrilenko,T. Gavrilenko +10 more
TL;DR: This work shows a lack of such predictive associations with wart resistance within the diversity of 52 landrace genotypes, which allows the selection of extremely resistant and susceptible genotypes available for future genetic and breeding studies.