Receptor kinases in plant responses to herbivory
Philippe Reymond
Abstract
Plants have the ability to detect and respond to biotic stresses. They contain pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) that specifically recognize conserved molecules from their enemies and activate immune responses. In this review, I discuss recent efforts to discover PRRs for herbivory-associated cues that originate from oral secretions, eggs, damaged plant cells or secondary endogenous signals. Although several potential PRRs have been identified and shown to confer resistance to insects, proof of direct binding to a ligand is scarce and there are still many uncharacterized ligand-receptor pairs. However, several studies suggest that, like for microbial pathogens, plants use similar PRR complexes to detect herbivory.
Topics & Concepts
BiologyHerbivoreReceptorPattern recognition receptorEndogenyImmune systemCell biologyLigand (biochemistry)Resistance (ecology)Plant defense against herbivoryNeuroscienceComputational biologyInnate immune systemEcologyGeneticsGeneBiochemistryPlant Parasitism and ResistancePlant-Microbe Interactions and ImmunityInsect-Plant Interactions and Control