Litcius/Paper detail

Structural specificity in plant–filamentous pathogen interactions

Aline Lacaze, David L. Joly

2020Molecular Plant Pathology35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Plant diseases bear names such as leaf blights, root rots, sheath blights, tuber scabs, and stem cankers, indicating that symptoms occur preferentially on specific parts of host plants. Accordingly, many plant pathogens are specialized to infect and cause disease in specific tissues and organs. Conversely, others are able to infect a range of tissues, albeit often disease symptoms fluctuate in different organs infected by the same pathogen. The structural specificity of a pathogen defines the degree to which it is reliant on a given tissue, organ, or host developmental stage. It is influenced by both the microbe and the host but the processes shaping it are not well established. Here we review the current status on structural specificity of plant-filamentous pathogen interactions and highlight important research questions. Notably, this review addresses how constitutive defence and induced immunity as well as virulence processes vary across plant organs, tissues, and even cells. A better understanding of the mechanisms underlying structural specificity will aid targeted approaches for plant health, for instance by considering the variation in the nature and the amplitude of defence responses across distinct plant organs and tissues when performing selective breeding.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyPathogenVirulenceHost (biology)Plant ImmunityDiseaseImmunityPlant diseasePlant defense against herbivoryMicrobiologyGeneticsGeneImmune systemBiotechnologyArabidopsisPathologyMutantMedicinePlant-Microbe Interactions and ImmunityPlant Pathogens and Fungal DiseasesPlant Virus Research Studies