Sugar flux and signaling in plant–microbe interactions

Summary Plant breeders have developed crop plants that are resistant to pests, but the continual evolution of pathogens creates the need to iteratively develop new control strategies. Molecular tools have allowed us to gain deep insights into disease responses, allowing for more efficient, rational...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Plant journal : for cell and molecular biology 2018-02, Vol.93 (4), p.675-685
Hauptverfasser: Bezrutczyk, Margaret, Yang, Jungil, Eom, Joon‐Seob, Prior, Matthew, Sosso, Davide, Hartwig, Thomas, Szurek, Boris, Oliva, Ricardo, Vera‐Cruz, Casiana, White, Frank F., Yang, Bing, Frommer, Wolf B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Summary Plant breeders have developed crop plants that are resistant to pests, but the continual evolution of pathogens creates the need to iteratively develop new control strategies. Molecular tools have allowed us to gain deep insights into disease responses, allowing for more efficient, rational engineering of crops that are more robust or resistant to a greater number of pathogen variants. Here we describe the roles of SWEET and STP transporters, membrane proteins that mediate transport of sugars across the plasma membrane. We discuss how these transporters may enhance or restrict disease through controlling the level of nutrients provided to pathogens and whether the transporters play a role in sugar signaling for disease resistance. This review indicates open questions that require further research and proposes the use of genome editing technologies for engineering disease resistance. Significance Statement Sugar efflux transporters play critical roles in plants pathogen interactions. Sugars released by them either feed the pathogens or prime defense.
ISSN:0960-7412
1365-313X
DOI:10.1111/tpj.13775