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Signalling between Pathogenic Rust Fungi and Resistant or Susceptible Host Plants
Authors:HEATH  MICHELE C
Institution: Botany Department, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5S 1A1
Abstract:Rust fungi are obligately biotrophic plant parasites that obtaintheir nutrients from living host cells. The initiation of thetwo parasitic phases of these fungi generally requires topographicsignals from the plant surface followed, for the dikaryoticphase, by a successive sequence of signals to control furtherfungal development within the plant. During the fungal lifecycle, three types of intracellular structures (invasion hyphae,M-, and D-haustoria) are formed and each may differently affectthe host membrane that surrounds it, as well as affecting othercellular components. Each intracellular structure also preventsnon-specific plant defences triggered by fungal activities,possibly by interfering with the signalling system rather thandefence expression. In resistant host cultivars, cellular invasiontriggers a rapid cell death (the hypersensitive response) thatshares some features with developmentally programmed cell deathin animal and plant tissues, and is controlled by parasite-specificresistance genes that resemble those that defend plants againstother types of pathogens. Evidence from one system suggeststhat this response is specifically elicited by a fungal peptideand does not involve the oxidative burst typical of resistanceexpression in other plant-pathogen interactions. However, overall,few of the molecules involved in any of these plant-rust fungiinteractions have been completely characterized and much isleft to be discovered, particularly with respect to how cellularsusceptibility to rust fungi is conditioned.Copyright 1997 Annalsof Botany Company Apoptosis; biotrophy; elicitor; hypersensitive response; oxidative burst; suppressor; Uromyces vignae
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