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host-parasite-interactions

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Host-parasite interactions describe the biological relationships between plants and parasitic organisms that exploit them for nutrition or survival. These interactions are crucial for plant science because they drive plant evolution, trigger adaptive immune responses, and directly affect crop productivity and ecosystem health. Understanding the mechanisms of parasitic attack and plant defense is essential for developing effective strategies to manage agricultural pests and diseases sustainably.

Parasitic castration by a viral protein tyrosine phosphatase targeting the host cell cycle checkpoint protein Rad9A.

PubMed · 2026-02-17

Parasitic wasps use a viral protein to disable a critical cell cycle checkpoint in host insects, preventing them from reproducing and allowing the parasite to hijack the host's reproductive resources—a mechanism that could inform understanding of host manipulation strategies.

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Viral protein tyrosine phosphatase specifically targets Rad9A, a host cell cycle checkpoint protein

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This molecular hijacking mechanism enables parasitic castration of host insects

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Parasites redirect host reproductive resources to support parasite development

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