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   The highly buffered Arabidopsis immune signaling network conceals the functions of its components  
   
نویسنده hillmer r.a. ,tsuda k. ,rallapalli g. ,asai s. ,truman w. ,papke m.d. ,sakakibara h. ,jones j.d.g. ,myers c.l. ,katagiri f.
منبع plos genetics - 2017 - دوره : 13 - شماره : 5
چکیده    Plant immunity protects plants from numerous potentially pathogenic microbes. the biological network that controls plant inducible immunity must function effectively even when network components are targeted and disabled by pathogen effectors. network buffering could confer this resilience by allowing different parts of the network to compensate for loss of one another’s functions. networks rich in buffering rely on interactions within the network,but these mechanisms are difficult to study by simple genetic means. through a network reconstitution strategy,in which we disassemble and stepwise reassemble the plant immune network that mediates pattern-triggered-immunity,we have resolved systems-level regulatory mechanisms underlying the arabidopsis transcriptome response to the immune stimulant flagellin-22 (flg22). these mechanisms show widespread evidence of interactions among major sub-networks—we call these sectors—in the flg22-responsive transcriptome. many of these interactions result in network buffering. resolved regulatory mechanisms show unexpected patterns for how the jasmonate (ja),ethylene (et),phytoalexin-deficient 4 (pad4),and salicylate (sa) signaling sectors control the transcriptional response to flg22. we demonstrate that many of the regulatory mechanisms we resolved are not detectable by the traditional genetic approach of single-gene null-mutant analysis. similar to potential pathogenic perturbations,null-mutant effects on immune signaling can be buffered by the network. © 2017 hillmer et al.
آدرس department of plant and microbial biology,microbial and plant genomics institute,university of minnesota,twin-cities,saint paul,mn,united states,mendel biological solutions,llc,hayward,ca, United States, department of plant and microbial biology,microbial and plant genomics institute,university of minnesota,twin-cities,saint paul,mn,united states,department of plant-microbe interactions,max planck institute for plant breeding research,cologne, Germany, the sainsbury laboratory,norwich research park,norwich, United Kingdom, the sainsbury laboratory,norwich research park,norwich,united kingdom,center for sustainable resource science,riken,tsurumi,yokohama,kanagawa, Japan, department of plant and microbial biology,microbial and plant genomics institute,university of minnesota,twin-cities,saint paul,mn,united states,institute of plant genetics of the polish academy of sciences,poznan, Poland, department of plant and microbial biology,microbial and plant genomics institute,university of minnesota,twin-cities,saint paul,mn,united states,department of computer science and engineering,university of minnesota,twin-cities,minneapolis,mn,united states,infinite campus,blaine,mn, United States, riken center for sustainable resource science,yokohama,japan,graduate school of bioagricultural sciences,nagoya university,nagoya, Japan, the sainsbury laboratory,norwich research park,norwich, United Kingdom, department of computer science and engineering,university of minnesota,twin-cities,minneapolis,mn, United States, department of plant and microbial biology,microbial and plant genomics institute,university of minnesota,twin-cities,saint paul,mn, United States
 
     
   
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