Reprogramming the virulence: insect defense molecules navigating the epigenetic landscape of metarhizium robertsii

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Abstract

Metarhizium species are the leading bio-control agents well characterized regarding pathogenicity to agricultural, forest, public health, stored grains and urban insect pests. They infect the target host through the tight conidial adherence with the insect cuticle. Conidial binding to the insect cuticle drive the systematic integrated disease development events in target host to impart pathogenesis. However, there is growing evidence that virulence of the pathogen is directly related with proteolytic enzymes including metalloproteinases, chymotrypsin-like proteinases and subtilisinlike proteinases. Successful host pathogenesis is the selection of right set of virulence-related proteinases, which evolved as a result of host-pathogen coevolution.

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Hussain, A. (2018, January 1). Reprogramming the virulence: insect defense molecules navigating the epigenetic landscape of metarhizium robertsii. Virulence. Taylor and Francis Inc. https://doi.org/10.1080/21505594.2017.1421828

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