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The Scientist: NewsBlog:
The cell wall defense
Posted by Alla Katsnelson [Entry posted at 12th February 2008 08:03 PM GMT]
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Thanks for your comments by Press Pass [Comment posted 2008-02-15 19:45:53] I just wanted to note, to the anonymous poster, that Somerville specifically referred to Peter Albersheim's work, as I noted in the blog. She also discussed other evidence that supports the idea of the cell wall's role in defense signaling.
-Alla Katsnelson Callose and Cell-Wall defence by kathryn mitchell [Comment posted 2008-02-15 08:57:45] There is no logic in the assumtion that lack of callose makes a plant more susceptible to disease. Callose deposition occurs in both successful and unsuccessful pathogen interactions. Further-more it is only one of many materials such as proteoglycans that deposited at the wall face.It is more likely that callose is deposited to stabilize the cell wall whilst other defence mechanisms are put into action. In fact in interactions with the bacterial pathogen pseudomonas syringae it has been shown that knocking the pmr-4 gene out has a detrimental affect on bacterial multiplication 24h after infection. Therefore any signalling events that take place are equally likely to be other stress responses such as senescence signals.
Uh -- duh ??? by anonymous poster [Comment posted 2008-02-14 21:14:28] Hello? This is new? Peter Albersheim! Bruce Kohorn! Umpteen other plant biologists!! How come Shauna Somerville doesn't know about their work??????? cell walls and prions by Ed Gehrman [Comment posted 2008-02-14 13:31:53] Couldn't prions be the result of cell wall defense. A bacterial (spiroplasma) attack could provoke the cell wall into forming the prion protein as a protection. Cell wall signaling isn't far fetched by anonymous poster [Comment posted 2008-02-13 14:33:13] It doesn't surprise me that alterations in the cell wall could induce changes in plant defense signaling. The extracellular matrix (ECM) surrounding animal cells was also thought to be purely structural, but within the past several years ECM proteins have been shown to directly alter cell behavior through activation/inhibition of various signaling pathways. Much of the work on this topic has focused on the role of ECM proteins during wound repair, but these studies provide insight into how alterations to the ECM surrounding tumors could enhance or even inhibit cancer progression. So yes, it is time to revisit the idea that changes in the cell wall can directly activate defense signaling pathways. Comment on this blog |