Preston Gail M
Department of Plant Sciences, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford, OX1 3RB, UK.
Mol Plant Pathol. 2017 Apr;18(3):443-456. doi: 10.1111/mpp.12530. Epub 2017 Feb 16.
One of the most fundamental questions in plant pathology is what determines whether a pathogen grows within a plant? This question is frequently studied in terms of the role of elicitors and pathogenicity factors in the triggering or overcoming of host defences. However, this focus fails to address the basic question of how the environment in host tissues acts to support or restrict pathogen growth. Efforts to understand this aspect of host-pathogen interactions are commonly confounded by several issues, including the complexity of the plant environment, the artificial nature of many experimental infection systems and the fact that the physiological properties of a pathogen growing in association with a plant can be very different from the properties of the pathogen in culture. It is also important to recognize that the phenotype and evolution of pathogen and host are inextricably linked through their interactions, such that the environment experienced by a pathogen within a host, and its phenotype within the host, is a product of both its interaction with its host and its evolutionary history, including its co-evolution with host plants. As the phenotypic properties of a pathogen within a host cannot be defined in isolation from the host, it may be appropriate to think of pathogens as having an 'extended phenotype' that is the product of their genotype, host interactions and population structure within the host environment. This article reflects on the challenge of defining and studying this extended phenotype, in relation to the questions posed below, and considers how knowledge of the phenotype of pathogens in the host environment could be used to improve disease control. What determines whether a pathogen grows within a plant? What aspects of pathogen biology should be considered in describing the extended phenotype of a pathogen within a host? How can we study the extended phenotype in ways that provide insights into the phenotypic properties of pathogens during natural infections?
植物病理学中最基本的问题之一是,是什么决定了病原体是否能在植物体内生长?这个问题常常从激发子和致病因子在触发或克服宿主防御中的作用方面进行研究。然而,这种关注点未能解决宿主组织中的环境如何支持或限制病原体生长这一基本问题。理解宿主 - 病原体相互作用这一方面的努力通常会因几个问题而变得复杂,包括植物环境的复杂性、许多实验感染系统的人为性质,以及与植物共生生长的病原体的生理特性可能与培养中的病原体特性非常不同这一事实。同样重要的是要认识到,病原体和宿主的表型及进化通过它们的相互作用紧密相连,以至于病原体在宿主体内所经历的环境及其在宿主体内的表型,是其与宿主相互作用以及其进化历史(包括与宿主植物的共同进化)的产物。由于病原体在宿主体内的表型特性不能脱离宿主来定义,或许可以将病原体视为具有一种“扩展表型”,它是病原体基因型、与宿主的相互作用以及宿主环境中种群结构的产物。本文围绕以下问题思考了定义和研究这种扩展表型所面临的挑战,并探讨了如何利用宿主环境中病原体表型的知识来改善疾病控制。是什么决定了病原体是否能在植物体内生长?在描述病原体在宿主体内的扩展表型时应考虑病原体生物学的哪些方面?我们如何以能深入了解自然感染期间病原体表型特性的方式来研究扩展表型?