| Literature DB >> 25484886 |
Lea Wiesel1, Adrian C Newton1, Ian Elliott2, David Booty2, Eleanor M Gilroy1, Paul R J Birch3, Ingo Hein1.
Abstract
Plants contain a sophisticated innate immune network to prevent pathogenic microbes from gaining access to nutrients and from colonizing internal structures. The first layer of inducible response is governed by the plant following the perception of microbe- or modified plant-derived molecules. As the perception of these molecules results in a plant response that can provide efficient resistance toward non-adapted pathogens they can also be described as "defense elicitors." In compatible plant/microbe interactions, adapted microorganisms have means to avoid or disable this resistance response and promote virulence. However, this requires a detailed spatial and temporal response from the invading pathogens. In agricultural practice, treating plants with isolated defense elicitors in the absence of pathogens can promote plant resistance by uncoupling defense activation from the effects of pathogen virulence determinants. The plant responses to plant, bacterial, oomycete, or fungal-derived elicitors are not, in all cases, universal and need elucidating prior to the application in agriculture. This review provides an overview of currently known elicitors of biological rather than synthetic origin and places their activity into a molecular context.Entities:
Keywords: crop protection; disease resistance; elicitors; pathogen effectors; priming
Year: 2014 PMID: 25484886 PMCID: PMC4240061 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2014.00655
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
List of plant-, bacterial-, oomycete-, and fungal-derived elicitor compounds, their activity against pathogens and effectiveness in plants.
| Plant | Oligogalacturonides | Several | Aziz et al., | |
| Milsana (giant knotweed) | Cucumber, tomato | Daayf et al., | ||
| Burdock fructooligosaccharide | Cucumber, tobacco, tomato | Wang et al., | ||
| Elicitor peptide 1 (Pep1) | Maize | Huffaker et al., | ||
| Carrageenans | Sangha et al., | |||
| Fucans | TMV | Tobacco | Vera et al., | |
| Ulvans | Several | Several | Jaulneau et al., | |
| Laminarin | Beans, grapevine, tobacco | Craigie, | ||
| Bacteria | Harpin | Rice | Lee et al., | |
| Lipopeptides | Tomato | Henry et al., | ||
| Dimethylsulfide | Maize, tobacco | Huang et al., | ||
| Pseudobactin | Several | De Vleesschauwer and Höfte, | ||
| Oomycetes | CBEL | Mateos et al., | ||
| Cryptogein | Tobacco | Bonnet et al., | ||
| Eicosapentaenoic acid | Potato | Henriquez et al., | ||
| Pep-13 | Parsley, potato | Nürnberger et al., | ||
| INF1 | Tobacco | Takahashi et al., | ||
| Fungi | β-glucans | Several | Several | Hahn and Albersheim, |
| Chitosan | Several | Several | Kishimoto et al., | |
| Chitin | Several | Several | El Ghaouth et al., | |
| Ergosterol | Grapevine, tobacco | Laquitaine et al., | ||
| Ron and Avni, | ||||
| Cerebrosides | Several | Umemura et al., | ||
| HR-inducing protein | Rice | Chen et al., | ||
| PeaT1 | TMV | Tobacco | Zhang et al., | |
| PebC1 | Tomato | Zhang et al., | ||
| PevD1 | TMV | Tobacco | Wang et al., | |
| PemG1 | Qiu et al., |
Figure 1Plants recognize chemical elicitors, Microbe-Associated Molecular Patterns (MAMPS) derived from non-pathogenic microbes, Pathogen-Associated Molecular Patterns (PAMPS) derived from pathogens and Damage-Associated Molecular Patterns (DAMPS) that are produced by plants upon insect, herbivore or pathogen attack, via transmembrane Pattern Recognition Receptors (PRRs). The recognition leads to the onset of defense mechanisms referred to as pattern-triggered immunity (PTI). Adapted pathogens secrete effectors that disturb plant defense mechanisms leading to effector-triggered susceptibility (ETS). Plant resistance (R) proteins recognize pathogen effectors and induce effector-triggered immunity (ETI). Treatment of plants with elicitor compounds (chemicals, MAMPs, DAMPs, or PAMPs) in the absence of adapted pathogen leads to priming and/or PTI-based immunity that put plants into an alerted stage of defense that provides some enhanced resistance toward otherwise virulent pathogens. Figure adapted from Henry et al. (2012), and Jones and Dangl (2006).
Figure 2Highly significant shared biological processes within .
Figure 3Highly significant shared molecular functions within .