Should I stay or should I go? Traffic control for plant pattern recognition receptors

Current Opinion in Plant Biology
Márcia Frescatada-RosaHannah Kuhn

Abstract

Plants employ cell surface-localised receptors to recognise potential invaders via perception of microbe-derived molecules. This is mediated by pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) that bind microbe-associated or damage-associated molecular patterns or perceive apoplastic effector proteins secreted by microorganisms. In either case, effective recognition and initiation of appropriate defence responses rely on a signalling competent pool of receptors at the cell surface. Maintenance of this pool of receptors at the plasma membrane is guaranteed by sorting of properly folded ligand-unbound and ligand-bound receptors via the secretory-endosomal network in an activation-dependent manner. Recent findings highlight that ligand-induced endocytosis is found across members of distinct PRR families suggesting a conserved mechanism by which PRRs and immunity is regulated.

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Citations

May 18, 2016·Plant Science : an International Journal of Experimental Plant Biology·Christina Kühn
May 25, 2016·Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology·William Underwood
Jul 6, 2018·Annual Review of Phytopathology·Jiejie Li, Christopher J Staiger
Nov 9, 2018·Molecular Plant Pathology·Aranka M van der BurghMatthieu H A J Joosten
Apr 4, 2019·Molecular Plant Pathology·Annette Niehl, Manfred Heinlein
Dec 18, 2019·Journal of Integrative Plant Biology·Wei WangDingzhong Tang
May 14, 2017·Current Opinion in Plant Biology·Stefanie Ranf
May 30, 2021·Plant Cell Reports·Adeeb RahmanNeeti Sanan-Mishra

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