Micrografting: An Old Dog Plays New Tricks in Obligate Plant Pathogens

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Abstract

Micrografting, which was developed almost 50 years ago, has long been used for virus eradication, micropropagation, regeneration, rejuvenation, and graft compatibility. Recently, micrografting has been used for studies of long-distance trafficking and signaling of molecules between scions and rootstocks. The graft transmissiveness of obligate plant pathogens, such as viruses, viroids, and phytoplasmas, facilitated the use of micrografting to study biological indexing and pathogen transmission, pathogen-induced graft incompatibility, and screening for the pathogen resistance during the past 20 years. The present study provides comprehensive information on the latter subjects. Finally, prospects are proposed to direct further studies.

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Wang, M. R., Bi, W. L., Ren, L., Zhang, A. L., Ma, X. Y., Zhang, D., … Wang, Q. C. (2022). Micrografting: An Old Dog Plays New Tricks in Obligate Plant Pathogens. Plant Disease, 106(10), 2545–2557. https://doi.org/10.1094/PDIS-03-22-0475-FE

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