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Effector Trafficking: RXLR-dEER as Extra Gear for Delivery into Plant Cells
When driving a car with automatic transmission, one hardly notices that extra gears give more power to the car. But in a car with manual transmission, one is constantly aware that even one gear shift helps to reach your goal much more efficiently. For Phytophthora pathogens, a domain characterized b...
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Published in: | The Plant cell 2008-07, Vol.20 (7), p.1728-1730 |
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container_title | The Plant cell |
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description | When driving a car with automatic transmission, one hardly notices that extra gears give more power to the car. But in a car with manual transmission, one is constantly aware that even one gear shift helps to reach your goal much more efficiently. For Phytophthora pathogens, a domain characterized by the amino acid motifs RXLR and dEER seems to function as a special gear. In this issue of The Plant Cell, Dou et al. (2008b; pages 1930¿1947) report that an RXLR-dEER domain embodies the complete machinery that the pathogen needs to deliver effectors into host cells. This is in contrast with the bacterial type III secretion system, which requires a multitude of proteins to accomplish this task (see figure panels A and B). |
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subjects | Algal Proteins - genetics Algal Proteins - metabolism Amino Acid Motifs - genetics Amino Acid Sequence Amino acids avirulence avr1b Cell death Erythrocytes Glycine max - microbiology Green Fluorescent Proteins - genetics Green Fluorescent Proteins - metabolism Host-Pathogen Interactions In This Issue Mathematical functions Models, Biological Molecular Sequence Data Oomycetes Pathogens Phytophthora - genetics Phytophthora - metabolism Phytophthora - physiology Plant cells Plants Proteins Recombinant Fusion Proteins - genetics Recombinant Fusion Proteins - metabolism Soybeans |
title | Effector Trafficking: RXLR-dEER as Extra Gear for Delivery into Plant Cells |
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