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Plants' immobile nature makes them vulnerable to a variety of biotic stresses. Pests and pathogens such as viruses, nematodes, bacteria, fungi, and herbivorous insects create biotic stressors in plants, which can significantly reduce and hinder crop productivity. The great Bengal famine of 1943 and the potato blight in Ireland (1845) are only a few examples of historical biotic stressors. Furthermore, climate change has the potential to alter the biotic stress paradigm. Changes in global temperature for example, can cause insect pests to spread across more territory, produce more generations per year, and increase the incidence of insect-transmitted plant diseases. These changes result in significant crop productivity losses, posing a danger to world food security. Plants have evolved to protect themselves from invading pests and pathogens by responding to these biotic stresses through a variety of morphological, biochemical, and molecular processes by detecting pathogen attacks and stop them before they can cause significant damage to the host tissues.
This book provides a complete and cohesive assessment of plant defence mechanisms in response to various biotic stresses. It also discusses the use of genetic engineering and molecular breeding to generate pathogen-resistant crops, as well as several case studies in the area. In addition, this work offers a path forward for dealing with impending issues. The study of host-pathogen interactions is concerned with the ongoing battle between plants and pathogens throughout their evolution which is generally complex. The appropriate updated information contained in this book, makes it a valuable source of knowledge for all those working in crop development as it presents a comprehensive picture of plant-pathogen interaction.
Hitendra K. Patel, PhD (University of Trieste) is a Principal Scientist at the CSIR (Council of Scientific and Industrial Research), Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Ministry of Science and Technology, Government of India. He has been an active researcher in plant-pathogen interaction over the past 10 years. During that time, he has published 45 referred journal articles and has been awarded three patents He has an h-index factor of 28.
Anirudh Kumar, PhD (University of Hyderabad), is an Associate Professor of Botany at the Central Tribal University of Andhra Pradesh, India. Since 2016, he has been an active educator and researcher on plant-pathogen interactions. He has published 27 referenced journal papers, edited 4 books and had an h-index of 21.
Chapter 1 The arms race of plants and pathogens: An IntroductionChapter 2 Surveillance at the surface: Pattern and Damage-triggered immunity in plantsChapter 3 Components of the cascade: Major protein families involved in defense signalingChapter 4 Fine tuning the responses: Role of phytohormones and their crosstalk in plant defenceChapter 5 Secret of success: Effector-triggered host susceptibility by phytopathogensChapter 6 Eliminating the enemy: Effector-triggered host immunity to combat infectionChapter 7 Silencing the enemy: Role of RNAi-based immunity in plantsChapter 8 Remembering the attack: Role of epigenetic modifications and their inheritance in plant defenseChapter 9 Players in action: Role of metabolites in plant defenseChapter 10 Relevance of the host-pathogen interactions database: An overviewChapter 11 Tailoring resistance: Genome editing for engineering broad spectrum disease resistanceChapter 12 Fast forward molecular and mutation breeding for developing disease resistance varietiesChapter 13 Impact of plant disease management on food security
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