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Till death do us pair: Co-evolution of plant–necrotroph interactions

Mark C. Derbyshire, Sylvain Raffaele

2023Current Opinion in Plant Biology29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Plants use programmed cell death as a potent defense response against biotrophic pathogens that require living host cells to thrive. However, cell death can promote infection by necrotrophic pathogens. This discrepancy creates specific co-evolutionary dynamics in the interaction between plants and necrotrophs. Necrotrophic pathogens produce diverse cell death-inducing effectors that act redundantly on several plant targets and sometimes suppress plant immune responses as an additional function. Plants use surface receptors that recognize necrotrophic effectors to increase quantitative disease resistance, some of which evolved independently in several plant lineages. Co-evolution has shaped molecular mechanisms involved in plant-necrotroph interactions into robust systems, relying on degenerate and multifunctional modules, general-purpose components, and compartmentalized functioning.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyEffectorPlant ImmunityProgrammed cell deathFunction (biology)Plant defense against herbivoryPlant disease resistancePlant cellCell biologyComputational biologyGeneticsGeneArabidopsisApoptosisMutantPlant-Microbe Interactions and ImmunityPlant Virus Research StudiesPlant Parasitism and Resistance
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