Temperaturabhängige Wachstums- und Verteidigungsregulierung
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Plants must grow fast enough to compete with their neighbors, while maintaining appropriate defenses against pathogens. Because defending and growing are costly processes, the survival of the more than 300,000 species of plants that currently inhabit earth often requires crosstalk between the two. Since the decision to grow or to defend depends on information derived from the local environment, plants must sense and respond to their environment in a coordinated way. For instance, temperature elevation can affect both growth and defenses in plants. The overall goal of this project is to understand how temperature signals affect defense and growth responses. For this, we study the signaling pathway controlled by Brassinosteroids (BRs), the steroids of plants. The BR signaling pathway is one of the very few systems in which the tools and mechanistic details exist to study cross talk at the molecular level. BRs can promote or interfere with plant growth and defenses, and the regulation of this crosstalk by temperature is largely uncharacterized. The specific goal of the proposed research is to use Arabidopsis thaliana as a model system to understand how the BR signaling pathway helps plants regulate growth and defense decisions when temperature is changing. To address this, we will use genomic, molecular genetics, biochemistry and cell biology methods. One of the major challenges of plant research in the 21st century is to breed crops that are resilient to global warming while displaying broad-spectrum and durable resistance to pathogens. Understanding how plants grow and defend themselves in elevated temperature conditions could provide a conceptual framework for developing promising biotechnological tools that would afford realistic prospects for developing plants with sustainable resistance to unrelated phytopathogens in the context of global warming.
| Title | Year(s) | DOI / Link |
|---|---|---|
| Reprogramming of flagellin receptor responses with surrogate ligandsNature Communications | 2024 | 10.1038/s41467-024-54271-5 |
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