Plant immunity and plant defense

Ralph Hückelhoven, Alexander Schouten

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

This chapter summarizes the current knowledge on how plants defend against pathogen invasion and proliferation by structural and biochemical defense measures. To this end, it recapitulates the genetic basis of plant immunity and susceptibility to diseases. It distinguishes preformed defense barriers from pathogen-induced defense measures and discusses some biochemical mechanisms of pathogen restriction. It further shows how plants detect invading pathogens via direct recognition of pathogen-derived molecules or via monitoring the integrity of plant structures and functions. It highlights early events during signal transduction and host cell reprogramming for pathogen defense. The chapter explains defense reactions at the molecular, cellular, tissue, and whole plant level and describes examples of how pathogens trick plants into successful pathogenesis.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationAgrios' Plant Pathology, Sixth Edition
PublisherElsevier
Pages161-210
Number of pages50
ISBN (Electronic)9780128224298
ISBN (Print)9780323851350
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2024

Keywords

  • Acquired resistance
  • Antimicrobial proteins
  • Avirulence
  • Cell wall-associated defense
  • Chemical defense
  • Effector-triggered immunity
  • Effector-triggered susceptibility
  • Elicitor
  • Histological defense structures
  • Hypersensitive reaction
  • Induced resistance
  • Pathogen-associated molecular pattern
  • Pathogenesis-related proteins
  • Pattern-triggered immunity
  • Race-nonspecific resistance
  • Race-specific resistance
  • Resistance gene
  • Resistosome
  • Signal transduction
  • Susceptibility gene

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