Research Keyword: Rab GTPases

Regulation of Oomycete Autophagy, Lipid Droplet Accumulation and Pathogenesis by Three Rab GTPases

This research investigates three protein molecules called Rab GTPases that control important cellular processes in a disease-causing organism called Peronophythora litchii, which damages litchi fruit crops. Scientists used modern gene-editing technology to remove these proteins and discovered they regulate how the pathogen grows, reproduces through spores, handles stress, and causes disease. The findings suggest these Rab proteins could be targeted to develop new strategies for controlling litchi downy blight and related plant diseases.

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The small GTPases FoRab5, FoRab7, and FoRab8 regulate vesicle transport to modulate vegetative development and pathogenicity in Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. conglutinans

Scientists studied three proteins (Rab GTPases) in a fungal pathogen that causes cabbage wilt disease. These proteins act like traffic controllers, directing materials within fungal cells to support growth and disease spread. By removing these genes one at a time, researchers found that all three proteins are essential for the fungus to infect plants, produce spores, and survive stress conditions. This research could eventually help develop new ways to control this destructive crop disease.

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