banners
beforecontenttitle

Plant immunity: insights from bacterial pathogens

Después del título del contenido
Antes del cuerpo del contenido
Trozos html editables
Trozos html editables
: 04/09/2018 10:00
: 04/09/2018 11:00
Ciencias, Investigación
Previous 1 / 1 Next
/static/merengue/ /static/merengue/ photo video panoramicview image3d audio

Seminario por: Jian-Min Zhou
State Key Laboratory of Plant Genomics, Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Beijing, China

MARTES 4 de SEPTIEMBRE a las 10:00
Facultad de Ciencias. Aula M2

Organiza el Programa de Doctorado y el Máster en Biotecnología Avanzada

Summary:

Higher plants deploy a large repertoire of Pattern-Recognition Receptors (PRRs), composed of Receptor Kinases (RKs) or Receptor-Like Proteins (RLPs) localized on plant cell surface, to perceive molecular patterns that are released by the pathogen or the host plant during infection activate pattern-triggered immunity (PTI). A growing number of bacterial pathogen effectors are found to inhibit PTI by directly targeting components  of  PRR complexes. However, these effector proteins can be recognized by intracellular Nucleotide-binding Leucine-rich repeat Receptors (NLRs), thereby “betray” the pathogen and activate the second layer of immunity. These findings highlight pattern-recognition as a major battleground in Jplant-bacterial pathogen interactions. I will discuss how our analyses of de Pseudomonas  syringae and Xanthomonas campestris campestris effector proteins and their host targets have led to new understanding of molecular basis of host recognition of pathogens by the two classes of immune receptors and signaling mechanisms downstream of PRRs.

Archivos adjuntos

Después del cuerpo del contenido