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TALE-induced cell death executors: an origin outside immunity?

Moritz K. Nowack, Danalyn R. Holmes, Thomas Lahaye

2021Trends in Plant Science32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Phytopathogenic bacteria inject effector proteins into plant host cells to promote disease. Plant resistance (R) genes encoding nucleotide-binding leucine-rich repeat (NLR) proteins mediate the recognition of functionally and structurally diverse microbial effectors, including transcription-activator like effectors (TALEs) from the bacterial genus Xanthomonas. TALEs bind to plant promoters and transcriptionally activate either disease-promoting host susceptibility (S) genes or cell death-inducing executor-type R genes. It is perplexing that plants contain TALE-perceiving executor-type R genes in addition to NLRs that also mediate the recognition of TALE-containing xanthomonads. We present recent findings on the evolvability of TALEs, which suggest that the native function of executors is not in plant immunity, but possibly in the regulation of developmentally controlled programmed cell death (PCD) processes.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyPlant ImmunityImmunityProgrammed cell deathEvolutionary biologyCell biologyComputational biologyGeneticsImmune systemGeneArabidopsisApoptosisMutantRNA Interference and Gene DeliveryCell death mechanisms and regulationCRISPR and Genetic Engineering
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