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Secretion and autophagy in plant defence against microbes
Dobešová, Karolína ; Žárský, Viktor (advisor) ; Burketová, Lenka (referee)
Plants are sessile organisms and when attacked by microbes, they cannot easily run away. For this reason, they have developed sophisticated defensive mechanisms, that allow them to defend themselves. Since plants, unlike mammals, do not have any special immune cells, their defense takes place in each cell separately. The key moment during a microbial infection is the recognition of the microbe by the plant through its released molecular patterns (mostly proteins) associated with microbes (MAMPs). MAMPs trigger signaling cascades that lead to the secretion of antimicrobial compounds to the site of an attack. The process of autophagy is also important in the defense against microbes, which not only maintains a cellular homeostasis and controls the level of phytohormones and defense proteins in the plant cytoplasm, but also participates in the secretory activity of the cell. Recent analyzes of plant secretome have shown that plants secrete many proteins (including defensive ones) independently of the signal peptide and compartments of a conventional secretion. During exocytosis a vesicle fuses with the cytoplasmic membrane. The octameric protein complex exocyst and SNARE proteins take part in this process. The exocyst complex is highly diversified in plants - especially it's EXO70 subunit, which is...

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