Genetics of autoimmunity in plants: an evolutionary genetics perspective

  • Wei Lin Wan
  • , Sang Tae Kim
  • , Baptiste Castel
  • , Nuri Charoennit
  • , Eunyoung Chae

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

36 Scopus citations

Abstract

Autoimmunity in plants has been found in numerous hybrids as a form of hybrid necrosis and mutant panels. Uncontrolled cell death is a main cellular outcome of autoimmunity, which negatively impacts growth. Its occurrence highlights the vulnerable nature of the plant immune system. Genetic investigation of autoimmunity in hybrid plants revealed that extreme variation in the immune receptor repertoire is a major contributor, reflecting an evolutionary conundrum that plants face in nature. In this review, we discuss natural variation in the plant immune system and its contribution to fitness. The value of autoimmunity genetics lies in its ability to identify combinations of a natural immune receptor and its partner that are predisposed to triggering autoimmunity. The network of immune components for autoimmunity becomes instrumental in revealing mechanistic details of how immune receptors recognize cellular invasion and activate signaling. The list of autoimmunity-risk variants also allows us to infer evolutionary processes contributing to their maintenance in the natural population. Our approach to autoimmunity, which integrates mechanistic understanding and evolutionary genetics, has the potential to serve as a prognosis tool to optimize immunity in crops.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1215-1233
Number of pages19
JournalNew Phytologist
Volume229
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2021

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
The authors are grateful to Rachelle Lee Rui Qi, Jinge Wang and Wei Yuan Cher for the comments on the manuscript. Special thanks go to three anonymous reviewers who provided constructive comments. The work was supported by the Academic Research Fund from Singapore Ministry of Education (MOE 2019‐T2‐1‐134: MOE Tier1 funds R‐154‐000‐B20‐114 and R‐154‐000‐B33‐114) and Intramural Research Fund from the National University of Singapore (Startup funds for EC).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Authors New Phytologist © 2020 New Phytologist Foundation

Keywords

  • autoimmunity
  • cell death
  • epistasis
  • genetic incompatibility
  • guardee
  • hybrid necrosis
  • NLR
  • plant immunity

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