Unveiling the Slippery Secrets of Saliva: Effector Proteins of Phloem-Feeding Insects

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Abstract

Phloem-feeding insects include many important agricultural pests that cause crop damage globally, either through feeding-related damage or upon transmission of viruses and microbes that cause plant diseases. With genetic crop resistances being limited to most of these pests, control relies on insecticides, which are costly and damaging to the environment and to which insects can develop resistance. Like other plant parasites, phloem-feeding insects deliver effectors inside their host plants to promote susceptibility, most likely by a combination of suppressing immunity and promoting nutrient availability. The recent emergence of the effector paradigm in plant–insect interactions is highlighted by increasing availability of effector repertoires for a range of species and a broadening of our knowledge concerning effector functions. Here, we focus on recent progress made toward identification of effector repertoires from phloem-feeding insects and developments in effector biology that will advance functional characterization studies. Importantly, identification of effector activities from herbivorous insects promises to provide new avenues toward development of crop protection strategies.

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Bleau, J. R., Gaur, N., Fu, Y., & Bos, J. I. B. (2024, March 1). Unveiling the Slippery Secrets of Saliva: Effector Proteins of Phloem-Feeding Insects. Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions. American Phytopathological Society. https://doi.org/10.1094/MPMI-10-23-0167-FI

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