<p>Plant-Microbe Interactions, Volume 1 Many plant-microbe interactions have agronomic importance because of either beneficial (e.g., nitrogen fixation or biocontrol) or detrimental (e.g., pathogenΒ esis) effects. Although these systems have been the subjects of scientific reΒ search for many years,
Effectors in Plant-Microbe Interactions
- Publisher
- Wiley-Blackwell
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 430
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Plants and microbes interact in a complex relationship that can have both harmful and beneficial impacts on both plant and microbial communities. Effectors, secreted microbial molecules that alter plant processes and facilitate colonization, are central to understanding the complicated interplay between plants and microbes.Β Effectors in Plant-Microbe Interactions unlocks the molecular basis of this important class of microbial molecules and describes their diverse and complex interactions with host plants.
Effectors in Plant Microbe Interactions is divided into five sections that take stock of the current knowledge on effectors of plant-associated organisms. Coverage ranges from the impact of bacterial, fungal and oomycete effectors on plant immunity and high-throughput genomic analysis of effectors to the function and trafficking of these microbial molecules. The final section looks at effectors secreted by other eukaryotic microbes that are the focus of current and future research efforts.
Written by leading international experts in plant-microbe interactions, Effectors in Plant Microbe Interactions, will be an essential volume for plant biologists, microbiologists, pathologists, and geneticists.
Content:Chapter 1 Innate Immunity: Pattern Recognition in Plants (pages 1β32): Delphine Chinchilla and Thomas Boller
Chapter 2 Microbial Effectors and Their Role in Plant Defense Suppression (pages 33β52): Dagmar Hann and Thomas Boller
Chapter 3 Comparative Genomics and Evolution of Bacterial Type III Effectors (pages 53β76): Ralf Koebnik and Magdalen Lindeberg
Chapter 4 The Effectors of Smut Fungi (pages 77β99): Gunther Doehlemann, Kerstin Schipper and Regine Kahmann
Chapter 5 Evolutionary and Functional Dynamics of Oomycete Effector Genes (pages 101β120): Mireille van Damme, Liliana M. Cano, Ricardo Oliva, Sebastian Schornack, Maria Eugenia Segretin, Sophien Kamoun and Sylvain Raffaele
Chapter 6 Suppression and Activation of the Plant Immune System by Pseudomonas syringae Effectors AvrPto and AvrPtoB (pages 121β154): Gregory Martin
Chapter 7 Rust Effectors (pages 155β193): Sebastien Duplessis, David L. Joly and Peter N. Dodds
Chapter 8 Dothideomycete Effectors Facilitating Biotrophic and Necrotrophic Lifestyles (pages 195β218): Thierry Rouxel and Pierre J. G. M. de Wit
Chapter 9 Effector Translocation and Delivery by the Rice Blast Fungus Magnaporthe oryzae (pages 219β241): Thomas A. Mentlak, Nicholas J. Talbot and Thomas Kroj
Chapter 10 Entry of Oomycete and Fungal Effectors into Host Cells (pages 243β275): Brett M. Tyler
Chapter 11 Roles of Effector Proteins in the LegumeβRhizobia Symbiosis (pages 277β293): Silvia Ardissone and William James Deakin
Chapter 12 Mutualistic Effectors: Architects of Symbiosis (pages 295β326): Jonathan M. Plett and Francis Martin
Chapter 13 Nematode Effector Proteins: Targets and Functions in Plant Parasitism (pages 327β354): Marie?Noelle Rosso, Richard S. Hussey, Eric L. Davis, Geert Smant, Thomas J. Baum, Pierre Abad and Melissa G. Mitchum
Chapter 14 Effectors in PlantβInsect Interactions (pages 355β375): Jorunn I. B. Bos and Saskia A. Hogenhout
Chapter 15 Fungal Secondary Metabolites: Ancient Toxins and Novel Effectors in PlantβMicrobe Interactions (pages 377β400): Jerome Collemare and Marc?Henri Lebrun
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