Researchers
at the Technical University of Munich, Germany, have now discovered that
receptors in plant cells identify bacteria through simple molecular building
blocks.
They
thought they had discovered the plants’ immune response to harmful bacteria,
but it was only the beginning.
"The immune system of plants is more sophisticated than we thought," said Dr. Stefanie Ranf from the Chair of Phytopathology at the university.
"The immune system of plants is more sophisticated than we thought," said Dr. Stefanie Ranf from the Chair of Phytopathology at the university.
When they delved into the constituents of the immune-response
substance, they found it was two main things. They were wrong with their first
guess and then found that the fatty-acids part is what does the work.
They are continuing their research in the belief that they
will eventually find the genes responsible for producing these fatty acids and
thus be able to provide plant breeders with information they can use to develop
varieties resistant to harmful bacteria.
It is this type of basic research that eventually leads to key commercially-useful advances, but it's also the type of research most at risk when politicians reduce taxes, then slash budgets. Some day we will look back on them last two decades of political fear to raise taxes as a huge mistake.