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Identification of plant genes involved in nonhost disease resistance Plants employ the more complex and evolutionarily more robust system of nonhost resistance against a broad range of pathogenic species. Nonhost resistance, shown by an entire plant species to a specific parasite or pathogen, is the most common and durable form of plant resistance to diseases. In spite of tremendous progress in plant science, nonhost pathogen resistance is still very poorly understood in contrast with the host resistance, shown by specific genotypes within an otherwise susceptible host species. Host resistance is often governed by single resistance (R) genes, the products of which directly or indirectly interact with specific elicitors produced by avirulence (avr) genes. Considerable progress has been made in our understanding of gene-for-gene resistance (R-avr interactions). In spite of this progress, it is still not clear why a pathogen fully virulent on one plant species is nonpathogenic on others. To date, nonhost resistance is one of the least understood phenomena in the area of plant-microbe interactions. Publications related to this project: Kang, L., Wang, Y-S., Uppalapati S. R., Wang, K., Tang, Y., Vadapalli, V., Venables, B. J., Chapman, K. D., Blancaflor, E. B., and Mysore, K. S. 2008. Overexpression of a fatty acid amide hydrolase compromises innate immunity in Arabidopsis. Plant Journal, in press. Wang, K. Kang, L., Anand, A. and Mysore, K. S. 2007. Monitoring in planta bacterial infection and population at both cellular and whole plant levels using GFPuv. New Phytologist, 174:212-223. (Cover page article). Mysore, K. S., and Ryu, C. M. 2004. Nonhost resistance: how much do we know? Trends in Plant Science, 9: 97-104. Kang, L., Tang, X., and Mysore, K. S. 2004. Pseudomonas type III effector AvrPto suppresses the programmed cell death induced by some nonhost pathogens in Nicotiana benthamiana and tomato. Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions, 17:1328-1336 |
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