Mycorrhiza-induced resistance: more than the sum of its parts?
Publication date
2013
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Abstract
Plants can develop an enhanced defensive capacity in response to infection by arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). This ‘mycorrhiza-induced resistance’ (MIR) provides systemic protection against a wide range of attackers and shares characteristics with systemic acquired resistance (SAR) after pathogen infection and induced systemic resistance (ISR) following root colonisation by non-pathogenic rhizobacteria. It is commonly assumed that fungal stimulation of the plant immune system is solely responsible for MIR. In this opinion article, we present a novel model of MIR that integrates different aspects of the induced resistance phenomenon. We propose that MIR is a cumulative effect of direct plant responses to mycorrhizal infection and indirect immune responses to ISR-eliciting rhizobacteria in the mycorrhizosphere.
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Taverne, International
Citation
Cameron, D D, Neal, A, van Wees, S C M & Ton, J 2013, 'Mycorrhiza-induced resistance: more than the sum of its parts?', Trends in Plant Science, vol. 18, pp. 539-545. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tplants.2013.06.004