serval:BIB_9C6EF1890197
Plant-arthropod interactions: who is the winner?
10.1111/tpj.13773
000424221200009
29160609
Stahl
E.
author
Hilfiker
O.
author
Reymond
P.
author
article
review
2018-02
The Plant journal
1365-313X
0960-7412
journal
93
4
703-728
Herbivorous arthropods have interacted with plants for millions of years. During feeding they release chemical cues that allow plants to detect the attack and mount an efficient defense response. A signaling cascade triggers the expression of hundreds of genes, which encode defensive proteins and enzymes for synthesis of toxic metabolites. This direct defense is often complemented by emission of volatiles that attract beneficial parasitoids. In return, arthropods have evolved strategies to interfere with plant defenses, either by producing effectors to inhibit detection and downstream signaling steps, or by adapting to their detrimental effect. In this review, we address the current knowledge on the molecular and chemical dialog between plants and herbivores, with an emphasis on co-evolutionary aspects.
Animals
Arthropods/physiology
Biological Evolution
Herbivory/physiology
Insecta/physiology
Phytoplasma/virology
Plant Physiological Phenomena
Plant Proteins/metabolism
Plants/chemistry
Plants/metabolism
Receptors, Pattern Recognition/metabolism
arms race
arthropods
co-evolution
defense metabolites
effectors
elicitors
plant defense signaling
eng
60_published
true
peer-reviewed
Publication types: Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ; Review
Publication Status: ppublish
University of Lausanne
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