| Literature DB >> 35587147 |
Carl L McCombe1, Julian R Greenwood1, Peter S Solomon1, Simon J Williams1.
Abstract
Pathogenic fungi use diverse infection strategies to obtain nutrients from plants. Biotrophic fungi feed only on living plant tissue, whereas necrotrophic fungi kill host cells to extract nutrients. To prevent disease, plants need to distinguish between pathogens with different life cycles, as a successful defense against a biotroph, which often involves programmed cell-death around the site of infection, is not an appropriate response to some necrotrophs. Plants utilize a vast collection of extracellular and intracellular receptors to detect the signatures of pathogen attack. In turn, pathogens are under strong selection to mask or avoid certain receptor responses while enhancing or manipulating other receptor responses to promote virulence. In this review, we focus on the plant receptors involved in resistance responses to fungal pathogens and highlight, with examples, how the infection strategy of fungal pathogens can determine if recognition responses are effective at preventing disease.Entities:
Keywords: biotroph; necrotroph; plant immunity
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35587147 PMCID: PMC9528087 DOI: 10.1042/EBC20210073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Essays Biochem ISSN: 0071-1365 Impact factor: 7.258
Figure 1Extracellular and intracellular receptor proteins can promote disease resistance or susceptibility to fungal pathogens
Cell-surface receptors are embedded in the plasma-membrane while intracellular receptors are localized to the cytosol. The cell-surface receptors are grouped into subfamilies based on their extracellular domain/s. Lysin-motif receptor-like proteins and receptor-like kinases (LysM-RLP/RLKs) can detect chitin oligomers released from the fungal cell wall to activate defense responses that promote disease resistance against biotrophic, hemibiotrophic, and necrotrophic fungi without leading to plant cell death. Leucine-rich repeat (LRR) receptors can detect secreted proteins (effectors) from pathogenic fungi and mediate downstream immune signaling by forming receptor complexes with other LRR-RLKs (SOBIR1 and BAK1). Notably, the LRR-RLP/RLKs that detect effectors from necrotrophic fungi and promote disease resistance do not lead to plant cell death. Likewise, wall-associated kinase (WAK) receptor proteins activate responses that typically promote disease resistance. However, Snn1 from wheat detects a necrotrophic effector (Tox1) and triggers a cell-death response that supports the growth of the invading necrotroph. Inside the cell, intracellular receptors detect effectors and typically promote disease resistance by initiating a localized cell-death response that restricts the growth of biotrophic and hemibiotrophic fungi. However, multiple necrotrophic fungi use effectors to manipulate intracellular receptors into activating cell death, ultimately promoting disease susceptibility. Only the receptors discussed in this review are depicted in the figure.
A summary of the receptors used by plants to detect invading fungi and the outcome of receptor activation as discussed in this review and depicted in Figure 1
| Plant receptor and species | Identified co-receptor/s | Molecule detected | Infection strategy of associated pathogen/s | Plant cell death | Outcome (enhanced disease resistance or susceptibility) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LysM-RLP/RLKs | |||||
| LYK5 – | CERK1 | Chitin oligomers | All | No | Resistance |
| CEBiP – Rice | CERK1 | Chitin oligomers | All | No | Resistance |
| LRR-RLP/RLKs | |||||
| RLP30 – | SOBIR1/BAK1 | A small secreted protein | Necrotroph | No | Resistance |
| RLP23 – | SOBIR1/BAK1 | NLPs | All | No | Resistance |
| Ve1 - Tomato | SOBIR1/BAK1 | Ave1 | Hemibiotroph | Yes | Resistance |
| Cf-9 - Tomato | SOBIR1/BAK1 | Avr9 | Biotroph | Yes | Resistance |
| WAKs | |||||
| Stb6 – Wheat | None | AvrStb6 | Necrotroph | No | Resistance |
| Snn1 – Wheat | None | Tox1 | Necrotroph | Yes | Susceptibility |
| Rlm-9 – Canola | None | AvrLm5-9 | Hemibiotroph | Yes | Resistance |
| WAK1 - | None | Oligogalacturonides | All | No | Resistance |
| Htn1 - Maize | None | Unknown | Hemibiotroph | No | Resistance |
| G-type lectin RLKs | |||||
| I-3 – Tomato | None | Avr3 | Hemibiotroph | Yes | Resistance |
| NLRs | |||||
| LOV1 – | None | Victorin | Necrotroph | Yes | Susceptibility |
| Tsn1 – Wheat | None | ToxA | Necrotroph | Yes | Susceptibility |
| MSP-kinase | |||||
| Snn3 – Wheat | None | Tox3 | Necrotroph | Yes | Susceptibility |
This table is not an exhaustive list of all plant receptors that detect pathogenic fungi.
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| MAMP | Microbe-associated molecular patterns are compounds derived from molecules required for microbial survival. MAMPs do not actively promote infection, examples include chitin oligomers from fungi and flagellin peptides from bacteria. |
| DAMP | Damage-associated molecular patterns are plant molecules that are released by cellular damage resulting from pathogen infection. |
| Phytocytokine | Plant peptides produced in the cytosol and secreted into the apoplast to stimulate plant immunity. |
| Effector | A secreted molecule, typically a small protein, that functions to promote infection. |