Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Sexual signalling in Chlamydomonas
- Gamete recognition and fertilisation in the fucoid algae
- The fungal surface and its role in sexual interactions
- Gamete recognition in angiosperms: model and strategy for analysis
- The molecular biology of self-incompatible responses
- Cell surface arabinogalactan proteins, arabinogalactans and plant development
- Local and systemic signalling during a plant defence response
- Contact sensing during infection by fungal pathogens
- The electrophysiology of root–zoospore interactions
- Molecular differentiation and development of the host–parasite interface in powdery mildew of pea
- Recognition signals and initiation of host responses controlling basic incompatibility between fungi and plants
- Cell surface interactions in endomycorrhizal symbiosis
- Host recognition in the Rhizobium leguminosarum–pea symbiosis
- The Rhizobium trap: root hair curling in root–nodule symbiosis
- Structure and function of Rhizobium lipopolysaccharide in relation to legume nodule development
- Index
- Plate section
Local and systemic signalling during a plant defence response
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Sexual signalling in Chlamydomonas
- Gamete recognition and fertilisation in the fucoid algae
- The fungal surface and its role in sexual interactions
- Gamete recognition in angiosperms: model and strategy for analysis
- The molecular biology of self-incompatible responses
- Cell surface arabinogalactan proteins, arabinogalactans and plant development
- Local and systemic signalling during a plant defence response
- Contact sensing during infection by fungal pathogens
- The electrophysiology of root–zoospore interactions
- Molecular differentiation and development of the host–parasite interface in powdery mildew of pea
- Recognition signals and initiation of host responses controlling basic incompatibility between fungi and plants
- Cell surface interactions in endomycorrhizal symbiosis
- Host recognition in the Rhizobium leguminosarum–pea symbiosis
- The Rhizobium trap: root hair curling in root–nodule symbiosis
- Structure and function of Rhizobium lipopolysaccharide in relation to legume nodule development
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
A principal feature of plant growth is the maximisation of surface area. This arises from the need of a sedentary organism to obtain the full spectrum of nutrients from the environment. One consequence of this survival strategy is increased vulnerability to pathogens and adverse conditions, since the subterranean and aerial boundaries of the organism with the external world will be immense.
Given this immensity and the lack of any specialised surveillance cells equivalent to the mammalian immune system, cells throughout the organism have evolved an ability to recognise foreign from self. The results of these molecular recognition events are reflected at the local site of stimulus perception but, importantly, are also transmitted to distant regions of the plant. There is now good evidence that defence gene expression and changes in the levels of defence-related products such as phytoalexins, callose and lignin are modulated by these local and systemic signalling events.
This chapter reviews research carried out on these topics at the University of Leeds, with particular reference to (1) plant defence responses to parasitic nematodes and (2) the molecular effectors of the wound-response. General literature to 1990, on defence-related proteins in higher plants has been reviewed by Bowles (1990a).
Plant–nematode interactions
One of the plant–nematode systems under study in my laboratory at Leeds University involves the response of potato (Solanum tuberosum) plants to potato cyst nematodes (Globodera spp.). The potato cultivar Maris Piper carries a single dominant gene for resistance (H1) that is effective against certain pathotypes of Globodera rostochiensis (for example, Ro1), but is ineffective against others (for example, Ro2) and against the closely related Globodera pallida (Sidhu & Webster, 1981).
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- Information
- Perspectives in Plant Cell Recognition , pp. 123 - 136Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1992