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Active H2020 European Commission

Utilizing diversity to decipher the role of autophagy in plant-microbe interactions

€1.5M EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Ruhr-Universitaet Bochum
Country Germany
Start Date Mar 01, 2021
End Date Feb 28, 2026
Duration 1,825 days
Number of Grantees 3
Roles Coordinator; Principal Investigator; Co-Principal Investigator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 948996
Grant Description

During the course of evolution, plants have been exposed to a plethora of beneficial and pathogenic microbes.

While symbionts are beneficial for the host plant by improving nutrient supply and health, pathogens are reprogramming their host only for their own benefit.

At the interface of this interaction proteomes at both sides are highly flexible and require regulated protein turnover.

In line with this, our previous work revealed that regulated protein degradation by autophagy is an essential player in plant immunity. Consequently, plant pathogens hijack autophagy during binary interactions though in contrasting manners.

However, in a more complete scenario, plants are constantly exposed to different microbes and hence it is crucial to include the microbial diversity into this equation to obtain a holistic picture of the role of autophagy in plant-microbe interactions. The picture is getting even more complex if we look at the cellular diversity on the host side.

Thus, DIVERSIPHAGY approaches the role of autophagy through bacterial and cellular diversity on the host side.

We aim to address following questions:Identifying how the bacterial diversity impacts autophagy and vice versaDetermining new bacteria and/or bacterial communities hijacking autophagyRevealing the autophagy degradome and novel autophagy factors by utilizing autophagy-modulating bacteriaIdentifying tissue and cell-type specific modulation of autophagy by diverse bacteria.With DIVERSIPHAGY we will reveal the holistic picture of the role of autophagy in plant-microbe interactions using a mixture of state-of-the-art approaches including metabolomics, proteomics, single-cell transcriptomics and cell-type specific reverse genetic screens.

As such DIVERSIPHAGY is the next generation approach to understand the role of plant autophagy in plant-microbe interactions and by translating our results into crop plants we will be able to develop more durable resistances toward destructive pathogens.

All Grantees

Ruhr-Universitaet Bochum; Washington University

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