Anti-Therapeutic Action: pathogenic infection by oomycetes and fungi

Intracellular accommodation of bacteria, fungi, and oomycetes by plants analyzed using transmission electron microscopy

Scientists used high-powered electron microscopes to examine how plants host different microorganisms inside their cells. They found that whether the microorganism is a helpful nitrogen-fixing bacterium, a nutrient-exchanging fungus, or a disease-causing oomycete, plants always separate it from the rest of the cell with a special membrane. This study reveals fundamental similarities in how plants accommodate different types of microorganisms, despite the very different outcomes for the plant.

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