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DOI: 10.1146/annurev.phyto.39.1.259
OpenAccess: Closed
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C<scp>OMMON</scp> M<scp>ECHANISMS FOR</scp> P<scp>ATHOGENS OF</scp> P<scp>LANTS AND</scp> A<scp>NIMALS</scp>

Hui Cao,Regina Lúcia Baldini,Laurence G. Rahme

Virulence
Biology
Identification (biology)
2001
▪ Abstract The vast evolutionary gulf between plants and animals—in terms of structure, composition, and many environmental factors—would seem to preclude the possibility that these organisms could act as receptive hosts to the same microorganism. However, some pathogens are capable of establishing themselves and thriving in members of both the plant and animal kingdoms. The identification of functionally conserved virulence mechanisms required to infect hosts of divergent evolutionary origins demonstrates the remarkable conservation in some of the underlying virulence mechanisms of pathogenesis and is changing researchers' thinking about the evolution of microbial pathogenesis.
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    C<scp>OMMON</scp> M<scp>ECHANISMS FOR</scp> P<scp>ATHOGENS OF</scp> P<scp>LANTS AND</scp> A<scp>NIMALS</scp>” is a paper by Hui Cao Regina Lúcia Baldini Laurence G. Rahme published in 2001. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.