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Plant Physiology 150:1621-1622 (2009) © 2009 American Society of Plant Biologists Focus: Plant Interactions with Bacterial PathogensPlant Physiology
The incorporation of resistance genes into agronomically important crop plants is the most economically effective method for controlling plant disease. This biological disease control strategy is heritable and, therefore, inexpensive and permanently available once introduced (Keen et al., 1993
In 1993, Noel Keen and colleagues wrote an insightful review that outlined the benefits to be gained if only cloned resistance genes were available for deployment against plant pathogens. Practically before the ink was dry, the doorway to a new era opened with the news from Steve Tanksley's laboratory at Cornell that the tomato PTO gene conferring resistance to strains of the bacterial pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv tomato carrying the corresponding avirulence gene AvrPto was a kinase (Ronald et al., 1992
Many plant pathologists now recognize two broad classes of the plant immune system termed pathogen-triggered immunity controlled by PRRs and effector-triggered immunity controlled by NBS-LRRs (Chisholm et al., 2006 This focus issue provides an update on the tools now in hand to combat bacterial pathogens and the insights gained in the ensuing years. With complete genome sequences of several host and pathogen partners now available, there are literally hundreds of candidate genes with potential applications in crop protection. These include genes with sequence similarity to known NBS-LRR genes and PRRs as well as genes controlling plant responses to hormones involved in disease resistance responses. In addition to well-established players including jasmonic acid, ethylene, and salicylic acid, Lamb and coworkers report in the current issue that altered expression of genes controlling abscisic acid synthesis can increase resistance to certain pathogens while increasing susceptibility in others. Bent and coworkers note that the ability of plants to respond rapidly with global changes in physiology was recognized decades before any cloned genes were available; and while there are "few truly new questions" to be asked, focusing attention on underexplored niches in research and biology is likely to amplify the information to be gained.
On the pathogen side, Collmer and colleagues consider that the greatest impact of a genomics approach has been the discovery that pathogens express many genes encoding many known or predicted effectors. They suggest that the greatest challenge will be to define how they work together to facilitate access to their host plants. Discovery of the "HRP" cluster and its relationship with the Yersinia outer membrane proteins in 1986 led quickly to the recognition that type III secretion is a central player in plant pathogenesis (Galan and Collmer, 1999
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.109.900297
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