therapeutic action: Potential for RNA-based crop protection strategies against fungal pathogens

Fungal Argonaute proteins act in bidirectional cross-kingdom RNA interference during plant infection

Scientists discovered that fungi and plants exchange genetic instructions called small RNAs to control each other during infection. A fungal pathogen called Botrytis cinerea uses special proteins called Argonautes to deliver these instructions into plant cells, which helps the fungus cause disease. Plants also send back their own genetic instructions to defend themselves. Understanding these molecular communications could lead to new ways to protect crops from fungal diseases.

Read More »
Scroll to Top