“…An xlg triple mutant, agb1, and agg1/2 also showed increased sensitivity to salt, tunicamycin, and D-Glc and had an increased stomatal density (Chakravorty et al, 2015). XLGs, AGB1, and AGG1/2 are known to be positive regulators of defense responses to several pathogens, and their loss-of-function mutants were compromised in the pathogen-associated molecular pattern-triggered oxidative burst, in disease resistance, or in BIR1-mediated defense signaling and programmed cell death (Zhu et al, 2009;Delgado-Cerezo et al, 2012;Lee et al, 2013;Liu et al, 2013;Maruta et al, 2015;Liang et al, 2016). XLG2 also interacts with RELATED TO VERNALIZATION1 (RTV1) and is involved in RTV1-mediated flowering time control (Heo et al, 2012).…”