Communication Between Filamentous Pathogens and Plants at the Biotrophic Interface

  • Mihwa Yi
    Department of Plant Pathology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506-5502;,
  • Barbara Valent
    Department of Plant Pathology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506-5502;,

Bibliographic Information

Published
2013-08-04
DOI
  • 10.1146/annurev-phyto-081211-172916
Publisher
Annual Reviews

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<jats:p> Fungi and oomycetes that colonize living plant tissue form extensive interfaces with plant cells in which the cytoplasm of the microorganism is closely aligned with the host cytoplasm for an extended distance. In all cases, specialized biotrophic hyphae function to hijack host cellular processes across an interfacial zone consisting of a hyphal plasma membrane, a specialized interfacial matrix, and a plant-derived membrane. The interface is the site of active secretion by both players. This cross talk at the interface determines the winner in adversarial relationships and establishes the partnership in mutualistic relationships. Fungi and oomycetes secrete many specialized effector proteins for controlling the host, and they can stimulate remarkable cellular reorganization even in distant plant cells. Breakthroughs in live-cell imaging of fungal and oomycete encounter sites, including live-cell imaging of pathogens secreting fluorescently labeled effector proteins, have led to recent progress in understanding communication across the interface. </jats:p>

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