Advances in the roles of SCOOP peptides and the receptor-like kinase MIK2 in plant stress responses.
Zhu J, Lv R, Yang R, Luan Y
Plant Signaling
Every cabbage, broccoli, and mustard green in your garden already carries this molecular alarm system — and understanding it could lead to crops that resist drought and disease without heavy pesticide or irrigation inputs.
Plants can't run from danger, so they've evolved clever chemical alarm systems. Researchers found that a family of tiny protein signals called SCOOPs act like distress flares, and a sensor on the plant's cell surface called MIK2 picks up those signals and triggers a defense response. This system helps plants fight off fungi, bacteria, and insects while also coping with dry or salty soil — and it only exists in the mustard plant family, which includes many of our common vegetables.
Key Findings
The SCOOP-MIK2 signaling module is specific to Brassicales (the mustard family, including cabbage, canola, and Arabidopsis), making it a unique defense innovation in that plant lineage.
This single molecular system coordinates responses to both biotic stresses (pathogens, herbivores) and abiotic stresses (drought, salinity), functioning as a multi-threat alarm rather than a single-purpose defense.
The review identifies SCOOP peptides and MIK2 as promising targets for crop engineering, including development of peptide-based, environmentally friendly plant protection products.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Scientists have identified a plant communication system — SCOOP peptides and their receiver protein MIK2 — that helps plants detect danger and mount defenses against disease, pests, drought, and salt stress while also balancing when to grow versus when to protect themselves.
Abstract Preview
To cope with complex and dynamic environmental stresses, plants have evolved sophisticated cell-surface sensing systems. In recent years, the Brassicales-specific SERINE RICH ENDOGENOUS PEPTIDE (SC...
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