4.7 Review

Making sense of hormone-mediated defense networking: from rice to Arabidopsis

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 5, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2014.00611

Keywords

hormone signaling; plant immunity; Oryza sativa; plant defense; disease resistance; microbial virulence; pathogen

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Funding

  1. PhD scholarship of the Chinese Research Council
  2. Special Research Fund of Ghent University [GOA 01GB3013]
  3. Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) [G.0833.12N]
  4. FWO postdoctoral fellowship

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Phytohormones are not only essential for plant growth and development but also play central roles in triggering the plant immune signaling network. Historically, research aimed at elucidating the defense-associated role of hormones has tended to focus on the use of experimentally tractable dicot plants such as Arabidopsis thaliana. Emerging from these studies is a picture whereby complex crosstalk and induced hormonal changes mold plant health and disease, with outcomes largely dependent on the lifestyle and infection strategy of invading pathogens. However, recent studies in monocot plants are starting to provide additional important insights into the immune-regulatory roles of hormones, often revealing unique complexities. In this review, we address the latest discoveries dealing with hormone-mediated immunity in rice, one of the most important food crops and an excellent model for molecular genetic studies in monocots. Moreover, we highlight interactions between hormone signaling, rice defense and pathogen virulence, and discuss the differences and similarities with findings in Arabidopsis. Finally, we present a model for hormone defense networking in rice and describe how detailed knowledge of hormone crosstalk mechanisms can be used for engineering durable rice disease resistance.

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