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Article
Nature 415, 977-983 (28 February 2002) | doi:10.1038/415977a; Received 28 August 2001; Accepted 24 December 2001
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MAP kinase signalling cascade in Arabidopsis innate immunity
Tsuneaki Asai1,4, Guillaume Tena1,4, Joulia Plotnikova1, Matthew R. Willmann1, Wan-Ling Chiu1, Lourdes Gomez-Gomez2, Thomas Boller3, Frederick M. Ausubel1 & Jen Sheen1
- Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, and Department of Molecular Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02114, USA
- Instituto de Desarrollo Regional, Sección de Biotecnología, Campus Universitario s/n, E-02071 Albacete, Spain
- Friedrich Miescher-Institute, PO Box 2543, CH-4002 Basel, Switzerland
- These authors contributed equally to the work
Correspondence to: Jen Sheen1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to J.S. (e-mail: Email: sheen@molbio.mgh.harvard.edu).
Abstract
There is remarkable conservation in the recognition of pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) by innate immune responses of plants, insects and mammals. We developed an Arabidopsis thaliana leaf cell system based on the induction of early-defence gene transcription by flagellin, a highly conserved component of bacterial flagella that functions as a PAMP in plants and mammals. Here we identify a complete plant MAP kinase cascade (MEKK1, MKK4/MKK5 and MPK3/MPK6) and WRKY22/WRKY29 transcription factors that function downstream of the flagellin receptor FLS2, a leucine-rich-repeat (LRR) receptor kinase. Activation of this MAPK cascade confers resistance to both bacterial and fungal pathogens, suggesting that signalling events initiated by diverse pathogens converge into a conserved MAPK cascade.
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