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Damage-Associated Molecular Patterns (DAMPs) in Plant Innate Immunity: Applying the Danger Model and Evolutionary Perspectives

Kiwamu Tanaka, Martin Heil

2021Annual Review of Phytopathology196 citationsDOI

Abstract

Danger signals trigger immune responses upon perception by a complex surveillance system. Such signals can originate from the infectious nonself or the damaged self, the latter termed damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs). Here, we apply Matzinger's danger model to plant innate immunity to discuss the adaptive advantages of DAMPs and their integration into preexisting signaling pathways. Constitutive DAMPs (cDAMPs), e.g., extracellular ATP, histones, and self-DNA, fulfill primary, conserved functions and adopt a signaling role only when cellular damage causes their fragmentation or localization to aberrant compartments. By contrast, immunomodulatory peptides (also known as phytocytokines) exclusively function as signals and, upon damage, are activated as inducible DAMPs (iDAMPs). Dynamic coevolutionary processes between the signals and their emerging receptors and shared co-receptors have likely linked danger recognition to preexisting, conserved downstream pathways.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyInnate immune systemDampAcquired immune systemCell biologySignal transductionPattern recognition receptorFunction (biology)ImmunityReceptorHistoneDNA damagePathogen-associated molecular patternImmune systemImmunologyGeneticsDNAPhysicsMeteorologyPlant-Microbe Interactions and ImmunityAntimicrobial Peptides and ActivitiesTransgenic Plants and Applications
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