4.6 Review

Biosensors: A Sneak Peek into Plant Cell's Immunity

Journal

LIFE-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/life11030209

Keywords

genetically encoded biosensors; live spatiotemporal imaging; crops; plant immune response; multiparameter imaging; biotic stress

Funding

  1. Slovenian Research Agency [P4-0165, J4-1777, J1-2467, 1000-20-0105]
  2. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [862858]

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Biosensors are crucial tools for understanding plant immunity, providing effective imaging for calcium and reactive oxygen species in plants. However, there is still room for improvement in imaging the main hormonal players in immune response. The most advanced genetically encoded biosensors have made it possible to monitor multiple analytes in the same chassis, showing great potential for applications in the field of crops.
Biosensors are indispensable tools to understand a plant's immunity as its spatiotemporal dimension is key in withstanding complex plant immune signaling. The diversity of genetically encoded biosensors in plants is expanding, covering new analytes with ever higher sensitivity and robustness, but their assortment is limited in some respects, such as their use in following biotic stress response, employing more than one biosensor in the same chassis, and their implementation into crops. In this review, we focused on the available biosensors that encompass these aspects. We show that in vivo imaging of calcium and reactive oxygen species is satisfactorily covered with the available genetically encoded biosensors, while on the other hand they are still underrepresented when it comes to imaging of the main three hormonal players in the immune response: salicylic acid, ethylene and jasmonic acid. Following more than one analyte in the same chassis, upon one or more conditions, has so far been possible by using the most advanced genetically encoded biosensors in plants which allow the monitoring of calcium and the two main hormonal pathways involved in plant development, auxin and cytokinin. These kinds of biosensor are also the most evolved in crops. In the last section, we examine the challenges in the use of biosensors and demonstrate some strategies to overcome them.

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