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Article Dans Une Revue Nature Biotechnology Année : 2010

Interfamily transfer of a plant pattern-recognition receptor confers broad-spectrum bacterial resistance

Résumé

Plant diseases cause massive losses in agriculture. Increasing the natural defenses of plants may reduce the impact of phytopathogens on agricultural productivity. Pattern-recognition receptors (PRRs) detect microbes by recognizing conserved pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs)1, 2, 3. Although the overall importance of PAMP-triggered immunity for plant defense is established2, 3, it has not been used to confer disease resistance in crops. We report that activity of a PRR is retained after its transfer between two plant families. Expression of EFR (ref. 4), a PRR from the cruciferous plant Arabidopsis thaliana, confers responsiveness to bacterial elongation factor Tu in the solanaceous plants Nicotiana benthamiana and tomato (Solanum lycopersicum), making them more resistant to a range of phytopathogenic bacteria from different genera. Our results in controlled laboratory conditions suggest that heterologous expression of PAMP recognition systems could be used to engineer broad-spectrum disease resistance to important bacterial pathogens, potentially enabling more durable and sustainable resistance in the field.

Domaines

Biotechnologies
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Dates et versions

hal-02666762 , version 1 (24-08-2022)

Identifiants

Citer

Severine Lacombe, Alejandra Rougon-Cardoso, Emma Sherwood, Nemo Peeters, Douglas Dahlbeck, et al.. Interfamily transfer of a plant pattern-recognition receptor confers broad-spectrum bacterial resistance. Nature Biotechnology, 2010, 28, pp.365-369. ⟨10.1038/nbt.1613⟩. ⟨hal-02666762⟩
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