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Ethylene-induced host responses enhance resistance against the root-parasitic plant Phelipanche aegyptiaca

Authors: Park, S., Yang, C., Westwood, J.

Date: 2025-10-06 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.10.05.680554

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Multi-species

AI Summary

The study demonstrates that ethylene signaling contributes to host resistance against the root parasitic plant Phelipanche aegyptiaca, as both water stress and parasitism activate ethylene responses in Arabidopsis roots. Application of the ethylene precursor ACC reduced parasite attachment, and mutants in ethylene signaling components (ETR1, CTR1) showed altered tolerance, highlighting ethylene-mediated defenses as a potential strategy for crop protection.

Phelipanche aegyptiaca ethylene signaling host resistance parasitic weed Arabidopsis thaliana

Multipartite coevolution shapes plant apoplastic immunity against rice blast fungus

Authors: Takeda, T., Shimizu, M., Kodan, A., Utsushi, H., Kanzaki, E., Natsume, S., Imai, T., Oikawa, K., Abe, A., Terauchi, R.

Date: 2025-07-06 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.07.03.663104

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Multi-species

AI Summary

The study demonstrates that a beta‑1,3‑glucan‑binding protein from the rice blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae interacts with the rice thaumatin‑like protein OsPR5, which sequesters the fungal protein to trigger immunity, while the fungus secretes thaumatin‑binding proteins to counteract this defense. Additionally, a rice cell‑surface receptor kinase containing a thaumatin domain has evolved to detect the fungal GBP, highlighting a complex coevolutionary arms race in the rice apoplast.

beta‑1,3‑glucan‑binding protein Magnaporthe oryzae Oryza sativa thaumatin‑like proteins co‑evolutionary immunity

Single-cell-resolved calcium and organelle dynamics in resistosome-mediated cell death

Authors: Chen, Y.-F., Lin, K.-Y., Huang, C.-Y., Hou, L.-Y., Yuen, E. L. H., Sun, W.-C. J., Chiang, B.-J., Chang, C.-W., Wang, H.-Y., Bozkurt, T. O., Wu, C.-H.

Date: 2025-07-01 · Version: 1
DOI: 10.1101/2025.06.27.662017

Category: Plant Biology

Model Organism: Multi-species

AI Summary

The study visualizes subcellular dynamics following activation of the NRC4 resistosome, showing that NRC4 enrichment at the plasma membrane triggers calcium influx, followed by sequential disruption of mitochondria, plastids, endoplasmic reticulum, and cytoskeleton, culminating in plasma membrane rupture and cell death. These observations define a temporally ordered cascade of organelle and membrane events that execute plant immune cell death.

NLR resistosome calcium signaling organelle disruption cell death cascade plant immunity