Molecular Plant Immunity 2012
DOI: 10.1002/9781118481431.ch2
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Molecular Basis of Effector Recognition by Plant NB‐LRR Proteins

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Over thousands of years, plants and pathogens have co‐evolved antagonistically. This co‐evolutionary battle enables plants to develop multilayered defence mechanisms and allows the pathogen to subvert host defences with a corresponding arsenal of counterstrategies (Bent & Mackey, 2007 , Ma et al, 2012a ). Plant pathogens have evolved virulence factors that interact with host proteins to interfere with host physiological processes and accelerate their infections (Regenmortel & Mahy, 2009 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Over thousands of years, plants and pathogens have co‐evolved antagonistically. This co‐evolutionary battle enables plants to develop multilayered defence mechanisms and allows the pathogen to subvert host defences with a corresponding arsenal of counterstrategies (Bent & Mackey, 2007 , Ma et al, 2012a ). Plant pathogens have evolved virulence factors that interact with host proteins to interfere with host physiological processes and accelerate their infections (Regenmortel & Mahy, 2009 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The malfunctioning of LRR proteins can result in cancer, schizophrenia, eye and lung diseases. [23] Although these proteins are involved in influencing myriad of physiological processes from viruses [12] to animals [24] and plants [25] and even as potential photoswitchable protein in cell signaling [26] but information regarding their structure and function is not completely understood. These scaffold proteins are sticky in nature and tends to form homo-dimers or higher order oligomers which limits their structural characterization using Xray crystallography techniques.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%