Molecular mechanisms involved in bacterial speck disease resistance of tomato

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Abstract

An important recent advance in the field of plant- microbe interactions has been the cloning of genes that confer resistance to specific viruses, bacteria, fungi or insects. Disease resistance (R) genes encode proteins with predicted structural motifs consistent with them having roles in signal recognition and transduction. Plant disease resistance is the result of an innate host defense mechanism, which relies on the ability of plant to recognize pathogen invasion and efficiently mount defense responses. In tomato, resistance to the pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. tomato is mediated by the specific recognition between the tomato serine/threonine kinase Pto and bacterial protein AvrPto or AvrPtoB. This recognition event initiates signaling events that lead to defense responses including an oxidative burst, the hypersensitive response (HR), and expression of pathogenesis-related genes.

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Kim, Y. J., & Martin, G. B. (2004). Molecular mechanisms involved in bacterial speck disease resistance of tomato. Plant Pathology Journal, 20(1), 7–12. https://doi.org/10.5423/PPJ.2004.20.1.007

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