Effector-Triggered Immunity: From Pathogen Perception to Robust Defense
Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research
Abstract
In plant innate immunity, individual cells have the capacity to sense and respond to pathogen attack. Intracellular recognition mechanisms have evolved to intercept perturbations by pathogen virulence factors (effectors) early in host infection and convert it to rapid defense. One key to resistance success is a polymorphic family of intracellular nucleotide-binding/leucine-rich-repeat (NLR) receptors that detect effector interference in different parts of the cell. Effector-activated NLRs connect, in various ways, to a conserved basal resistance network in order to transcriptionally boost defense programs. Effector-triggered immunity displays remarkable robustness against pathogen disturbance, in part by…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 79.16
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 162
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Effector
- Biology
- Innate immune system
- Cell biology
- Immunity
- Pathogen
- Transcription factor
- Immune system