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      Loss of susceptibility as a novel breeding strategy for durable and broad-spectrum resistance

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          Abstract

          Recent studies on plant immunity have suggested that a pathogen should suppress induced plant defense in order to infect a plant species, which otherwise would have been a nonhost to the pathogen. For this purpose, pathogens exploit effector molecules to interfere with different layers of plant defense responses. In this review, we summarize the latest findings on plant factors that are activated by pathogen effectors to suppress plant immunity. By looking from a different point of view into host and nonhost resistance, we propose a novel breeding strategy: disabling plant disease susceptibility genes (S-genes) to achieve durable and broad-spectrum resistance.

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          Most cited references84

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          Virus-induced gene silencing in tomato.

          We have previously demonstrated that a tobacco rattle virus (TRV)-based vector can be used in virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) to study gene function in Nicotiana benthamiana. Here we show that recombinant TRV infects tomato plants and induces efficient gene silencing. Using this system, we suppressed the PDS, CTR1 and CTR2 genes in tomato. Suppression of CTR1 led to a constitutive ethylene response phenotype and up-regulation of an ethylene response gene, CHITINASE B. This phenotype is similar to Arabidopsis ctr1 mutant plants. We have constructed a modified TRV vector based on the GATEWAY recombination system, allowing restriction- and ligation-free cloning. Our results show that tomato expressed sequence tags (ESTs) can easily be cloned into this modified vector using a single set of primers. Using this vector, we have silenced RbcS and an endogenous gene homologous to the tomato EST cLED3L14. In the future, this modified vector system will facilitate large-scale functional analysis of tomato ESTs.
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            Innate immunity in plants: an arms race between pattern recognition receptors in plants and effectors in microbial pathogens.

            For many years, research on a suite of plant defense responses that begin when plants are exposed to general microbial elicitors was underappreciated, for a good reason: There has been no critical experimental demonstration of their importance in mediating plant resistance during pathogen infection. Today, these microbial elicitors are named pathogen- or microbe-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs or MAMPs) and the plant responses are known as PAMP-triggered immunity (PTI). Recent studies provide an elegant explanation for the difficulty of demonstrating the role of PTI in plant disease resistance. It turns out that the important contribution of PTI to disease resistance is masked by pathogen virulence effectors that have evolved to suppress it.
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              The barley Mlo gene: a novel control element of plant pathogen resistance.

              Mutation-induced recessive alleles (mlo) of the barley Mlo locus confer a leaf lesion phenotype and broad spectrum resistance to the fungal pathogen, Erysiphe graminis f. sp. hordei. The gene has been isolated using a positional cloning approach. Analysis of 11 mutagen-induced mlo alleles revealed mutations leading in each case to alterations of the deduced Mlo wild-type amino acid sequence. Susceptible intragenic recombinants, isolated from mlo heteroallelic crosses, show restored Mlo wild-type sequences. The deduced 60 kDa protein is predicted to be membrane-anchored by at least six membrane-spanning helices. The findings are compatible with a dual negative control function of the Mlo protein in leaf cell death and in the onset of pathogen defense; absence of Mlo primes the responsiveness for the onset of multiple defense functions.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                bai.yuling@wur.nl
                Journal
                Mol Breed
                Molecular Breeding
                Springer Netherlands (Dordrecht )
                1380-3743
                1572-9788
                15 August 2009
                15 August 2009
                January 2010
                : 25
                : 1
                : 1-12
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Graduate School Experimental Plant Sciences, Wageningen UR-Plant Breeding, Droevendaalsesteeg 1, 6708 PB Wageningen, The Netherlands
                [2 ]Department of Agroforestry, Environmental Biology and Chemistry, Section of Genetics and Plant Breeding, University of Bari, Via Amendola 165/A, 70126 Bari, Italy
                Article
                9323
                10.1007/s11032-009-9323-6
                2837247
                20234841
                54535f26-235d-4375-abef-88a284fcc596
                © The Author(s) 2009
                History
                : 1 April 2009
                : 31 July 2009
                Categories
                Review
                Custom metadata
                © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2010

                Animal science & Zoology
                recessive resistance,effector-triggered susceptibility,effector target,susceptibility genes,effector

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