The early response during the interaction of fungal phytopathogen and host plant
Author(s) -
Yilin Shen,
Na Liu,
Chuang Li,
Xin Wang,
Xiaomeng Xu,
Wan Chen,
Guozhen Xing,
Wenming Zheng
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
open biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.078
H-Index - 53
ISSN - 2046-2441
DOI - 10.1098/rsob.170057
Subject(s) - biology , host (biology) , virulence , plant disease resistance , pathogen , defence mechanisms , innate immune system , plant immunity , systemic acquired resistance , fungal pathogen , hypersensitive response , resistance (ecology) , crop , cladosporium , biotic stress , immune system , gene , microbiology and biotechnology , botany , genetics , ecology , abiotic stress , arabidopsis , penicillium , mutant
Plants can be infected by a variety of pathogens, most of which can cause severe economic losses. The plants resist the invasion of pathogens via the innate or acquired immune system for surviving biotic stress. The associations between plants and pathogens are sophisticated beyond imaging and the interactions between them can occur at a very early stage after their touching each other. A number of researchers in the past decade have shown that many biochemical events appeared even as early as 5 min after their touching for plant disease resistance response. The early molecular interactions of plants and pathogens are likely to involve protein phosphorylation, ion fluxes, reactive oxygen species (ROS) and other signalling transduction. Here, we reviewed the recent progress in the study for molecular interaction response of fungal pathogens and host plant at the early infection stage, which included many economically important crop fungal pathogens such as cereal rust fungi, tomato Cladosporium fulvum , rice blast and so on. By dissecting the earlier infection stage of the diseases, the avirulent/virulent genes of pathogen or resistance genes of plant could be defined more clearly and accurately, which would undoubtedly facilitate fungal pathogenesis study and resistant crop breeding.
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