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Virus perception at the cell surface: revisiting the roles of receptor‐like kinases as viral pattern recognition receptors
Author(s) -
Teixeira Ruan M.,
Ferreira Marco Aurélio,
Raimundo Gabriel A. S.,
Loriato Virgílio A. P.,
Reis Pedro A. B.,
Fontes Elizabeth P. B.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
molecular plant pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.945
H-Index - 103
eISSN - 1364-3703
pISSN - 1464-6722
DOI - 10.1111/mpp.12816
Subject(s) - biology , pattern recognition receptor , innate immune system , effector , virus , virology , rna silencing , microbiology and biotechnology , receptor , viral replication , gene silencing , immune system , rna interference , rna , immunology , genetics , gene
Summary Activation of antiviral innate immune responses depends on the recognition of viral components or viral effectors by host receptors. This virus recognition system can activate two layers of host defence, pathogen‐associated molecular pattern (PAMP)‐triggered immunity (PTI) and effector‐triggered immunity (ETI). While ETI has long been recognized as an efficient plant defence against viruses, the concept of antiviral PTI has only recently been integrated into virus–host interaction models, such as the RNA silencing‐based defences that are triggered by viral dsRNA PAMPs produced during infection. Emerging evidence in the literature has included the classical PTI in the antiviral innate immune arsenal of plant cells. Therefore, our understanding of PAMPs has expanded to include not only classical PAMPS, such as bacterial flagellin or fungal chitin, but also virus‐derived nucleic acids that may also activate PAMP recognition receptors like the well‐documented phenomenon observed for mammalian viruses. In this review, we discuss the notion that plant viruses can activate classical PTI, leading to both unique antiviral responses and conserved antipathogen responses. We also present evidence that virus‐derived nucleic acid PAMPs may elicit the NUCLEAR SHUTTLE PROTEIN‐INTERACTING KINASE 1 (NIK1)‐mediated antiviral signalling pathway that transduces an antiviral signal to suppress global host translation.

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