types of plant pathogens

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Types of plant pathogens Necrotrophic pathoge Biotrophic pathogen Hemibiotrophic

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Types of plant pathogens. Necrotrophic pathogen. Biotrophic pathogen. Hemibiotrophic. Plants cannot do many things. Plants have disposable body parts; we don’t. Basic defenses of a plant. Living in the apoplast. Hypersensitive responses kill small parts of the leaf. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Types of plant pathogens

Types of plant pathogens

Necrotrophic pathogen

Biotrophic pathogen

Hemibiotrophic

Page 2: Types of plant pathogens

Plants cannot do many things

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Page 3: Types of plant pathogens

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Plants have disposable body parts; we don’t

Page 4: Types of plant pathogens

Basic defenses of a plant

Page 5: Types of plant pathogens

Living in the apoplast

Page 7: Types of plant pathogens

Hypersensitive response

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Page 8: Types of plant pathogens

Systemic acquired immunity

Page 9: Types of plant pathogens

Involves salicylate but this is not the

factor acting through the plant

Vernooij, B. et al. 1994, Plant Cell 6: 959-965

wt No Salicylate

No SAR in scion

Page 10: Types of plant pathogens

TMV plaques in scion leaves

Vernooij, B. et al. 1994, Plant Cell 6: 959-965

X/N N/X

X/X N/N

Page 11: Types of plant pathogens

JA induction by insects and necrotrophs

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Biochemistry and Molecular Biology of Plants, Buchanan et al. ed, 2000

Page 12: Types of plant pathogens

Arginine and threonine depletion in the gut

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2005 Dec 27;102(52):19237-42.

No JA Constitutive JA

Page 13: Types of plant pathogens

Crunchers vs suckers

Page 14: Types of plant pathogens

Pseudomonas syringae alters the immune balance of the plant

Page 15: Types of plant pathogens
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Page 18: Types of plant pathogens

RR or Rr rr

Avr1No

diseaseDISEASE

avr1 Disease Disease

The gene-for-gene resistance model

Host Genes

Microbe Genes

Page 19: Types of plant pathogens
Page 20: Types of plant pathogens

Similarity between R genes and Toll

Staskawicz B.J. et al. Science, 2001 5525: 2285-9

Page 21: Types of plant pathogens
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Bacterial cell

Host cytoplasm

Bacteria secrete proteins into the plant cellCytoplasm using a type III secretion system

Page 24: Types of plant pathogens
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Crunchers vs suckers

Page 27: Types of plant pathogens

Mi-1 is an R gene giving resistance to nematode and aphid infection

Vos, P. et al. 1998 Nature Biotechnology 16: 1365-69

Wild type:Aphid infested

Carrying Mi-1

Page 28: Types of plant pathogens

Fungi must break through the surface of

the leaf http://www.nysaes.cornell.edu/pp/faculty/hoch/images/black_rot6.gif

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Page 29: Types of plant pathogens

Barley powdery mildew (Bgh)

Blumeria graminis f.sp hordei

Nonhost infection on Arabidopsis

Arabidopsispowdery mildewErysiphe cichoracearum

Host infectionon Arabidopsis

Host infectionon Barley

From : Monica Stein, Somerville lab, Stanford

Page 30: Types of plant pathogens

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Structure of the penetration peg

Page 32: Types of plant pathogens

A) germination and attempted penetration

Spore Appressorium

Hypha

Host:95%

Host:90%

Host:90%

Spore

Appressorium

Nonhost:90%

Nonhost:2%

Nonhost:4%

C) Hyphal elongation

B) penetration and haustorial development

D) Conidiation

Host:90%

Nonhost:0%

haustorium haustorium

hyphae hyphae

conidia

cell death

Erysiphe cichoracearum on Arabidopsis Blumeria graminis f.sp. hordei on Arabidopsis

Page 33: Types of plant pathogens

Cytological Characterization

(Zimmerli,L; Stein,M; Lipka,V; Schulze-Lefert,P; Somerville,SC, Plant Journal (2004))

host

nonhost • Nonhost haustoria were rapidly encased in callose

• callose deposition in response to pathogen attack was dramatically different between host and nonhost inoculation.

P

H

Papillae

From : Monica Stein, Somerville lab, Stanford

Page 34: Types of plant pathogens

Callose is deposited at infection sites

Page 35: Types of plant pathogens

pen mutants

WT pen1

From : Monica Stein, Somerville lab, Stanford

Page 36: Types of plant pathogens

pen3 plants allow more hyphal growth than other pen mutants

WT pen3

From : Monica Stein, Somerville lab, Stanford

Page 37: Types of plant pathogens

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

1 2

Wt

48M3

136N4

114N4

Phenotype Quantification% of germinated spores

****

**

**

**

Elongated HyphaePenetration

pen1

pen2

pen3

P<.0001 P<.01***

From : Monica Stein, Somerville lab, Stanford

Page 38: Types of plant pathogens

The story is complicated: Mutation of the callose

synthase increases resistance to a fungal pathogen

Nishimura, M.T. et al. Science 2003 301: 969-72.