The long and winding road: virulence effector proteins of plant pathogenic bacteria
Date
2010
Authors
Hann, Dagmar R
Rathjen, John
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Birkhauser Verlag
Abstract
Plant pathogenic bacteria inject about 30 virulence effector proteins into the host cell using a specialized secretion apparatus. Bacteria which are unable to do this elicit host immunity and cannot grow inside living plant tissue. Thus, the primary function of the effectors is to suppress host immunity. The identity of individual effectors within each complement varies even between closely related bacterial strains, and effectors themselves act redundantly and are apparently interchangeable. Many effectors are known to target components of plant defense pathways, but it is difficult to study their role in molecular terms. For some of them, there is controversy about their mode of action. We propose that effectors act promiscuously by targeting host molecules with low specificity and affinity.
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Keywords
Keywords: effector protein; guanosine triphosphatase activating protein; mitogen activated protein kinase; pattern recognition receptor; unclassified drug; vegetable protein; bacterial protein; virulence factor; bacterial growth; bacterial strain; bacterial virulen Effector proteins; Innate immunity; MAMPs; Type III secretion system; Virulence factors
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Source
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences
Type
Journal article
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Restricted until
2037-12-31
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