Research Keyword: glycosyl hydrolase

Botrytis cinerea combines four molecular strategies to tolerate membrane-permeating plant compounds and to increase virulence

Botrytis cinerea is a fungus that causes plant disease by overcoming plant chemical defenses called saponins. Researchers discovered that this fungus uses four different molecular strategies to survive saponin exposure: it breaks down saponins with an enzyme, modifies membrane structures to resist saponin damage, activates proteins that protect the cell membrane, and repairs membrane damage after it occurs. These findings explain how this fungus successfully infects plants protected by saponins and reveal new understanding of how microorganisms resist antimicrobial compounds.

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