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For investigators engaged in the study of toxins generally, and
host-specific toxins in particular, it is a rare treat to attend a
meeting in which toxins involved in plant pathogenesis are
emphasized. A gathering of this type provides opportunity to
consider the discovery of new toxins, their chemical structures,
genes encoding enzymes that control their biosyntheses, their sites
of action and physiological effects on plants, and their roles (if
any) in pathological processes. Having acknowledged the inspiration
fostered by a 'toxin meeting', however, it is important to point
out that the program of this symposium was generously sprinkled
with 'nontoxin' talks. These contributions generated
cross-disciplinary discussion and promoted new ways of thinking
about relationships among factors required for plant disease
development. The point can be illustrated by considering just one
example. We have in the past often regarded diseases mediated by
host-specific toxins and diseases involving 'gene-for-gene'
relationships as representing two different classes of fungal/plant
interaction. This is largely because the key molecular recognition
event in so-called 'toxin' diseases leads to compatibility, whereas
the corresponding event in 'gene-for-gene' diseases leads to
incompatibility. Yet the race specific elicitors produced by the
'gene-for-gene' fungi Cladosporium fulvum (De Wit, Adv. Bot. Res.
21:147- 185, 1995) and Rhynchosporium secalis (Rohe et a1. , EMBO
J.
For investigators engaged in the study of toxins generally, and
host-specific toxins in particular, it is a rare treat to attend a
meeting in which toxins involved in plant pathogenesis are
emphasized. A gathering of this type provides opportunity to
consider the discovery of new toxins, their chemical structures,
genes encoding enzymes that control their biosyntheses, their sites
of action and physiological effects on plants, and their roles (if
any) in pathological processes. Having acknowledged the inspiration
fostered by a 'toxin meeting', however, it is important to point
out that the program of this symposium was generously sprinkled
with 'nontoxin' talks. These contributions generated
cross-disciplinary discussion and promoted new ways of thinking
about relationships among factors required for plant disease
development. The point can be illustrated by considering just one
example. We have in the past often regarded diseases mediated by
host-specific toxins and diseases involving 'gene-for-gene'
relationships as representing two different classes of fungal/plant
interaction. This is largely because the key molecular recognition
event in so-called 'toxin' diseases leads to compatibility, whereas
the corresponding event in 'gene-for-gene' diseases leads to
incompatibility. Yet the race specific elicitors produced by the
'gene-for-gene' fungi Cladosporium fulvum (De Wit, Adv. Bot. Res.
21:147- 185, 1995) and Rhynchosporium secalis (Rohe et a1. , EMBO
J.
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