Litcius/Paper detail

How bacteria overcome flagellin pattern recognition in plants

Nattapong Sanguankiattichai, Pierre Buscaill, Gail M. Preston

2022Current Opinion in Plant Biology44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Efficient plant immune responses depend on the ability to recognise an invading microbe. The 22-amino acids in the N-terminal domain and the 28-amino acids in the central region of the bacterial flagellin, called flg22 and flgII-28, respectively, are important elicitors of plant immunity. Plant immunity is activated after flg22 or flgII-28 recognition by the plant transmembrane receptors FLS2 or FLS3, respectively. There is strong selective pressure on many plant pathogenic and endophytic bacteria to overcome flagellin-triggered immunity. Here we provide an overview of recent developments in our understanding of the evasion and suppression of flagellin pattern recognition by plant-associated bacteria.

Topics & Concepts

FlagellinPlant ImmunityBiologyBacteriaPattern recognition receptorImmunityEvasion (ethics)Immune systemAmino acidTransmembrane proteinMicrobiologyBotanyCell biologyReceptorBiochemistryGeneticsGeneArabidopsisMutantPlant-Microbe Interactions and ImmunityLegume Nitrogen Fixing SymbiosisPlant Pathogenic Bacteria Studies