Jean T Greenberg
Research Summary / Selected Publications
My broad interest is in how organisms adapt to a changing environment. I study this in the context of host-pathogen interactions using the model system of the plant Arabidopsis thaliana and the gram negative pathogen Pseudomonas syringae. In response to infection, plants mount a complex defense response involving cell suicide, the crosslinking of cell wall components, antibiotic production and defense gene activation. We discovered that infection also activates cell growth and the cell cycle. We study how Arabidopsis regulates its defense and cell death response to pathogens using mutants, which express one or more aspects of the defense response in the absence of pathogens. We focus on a particular class of mutants, which show cell suicide and defense responses when no pathogen is present. We call these mutants acd for accelerated cell death. We use a collection of these mutants in two ways. First, we try to learn about defense signaling and cell death control using these mutants in combination with other mutations that affect specific aspects of plant defense. Second, we clone the genes identified by the mutations in order to gain insights into the molecular basis for the mutant phenotypes and as reagents for doing biochemical and cell biological studies on the mechanism of gene...
Jung, H.W., Tschaplinski, T.J., Wang, L., Glazebrook, J., Greenberg, J.T. (2009) Priming in systemic plant immunity. Science 234: 89-91 article
Lu H., Salimian, S., Gamelin, E., Wang, G., Fedorowski, J., LaCourse, W., Greenberg, J. T. (2009) Genetic analysis of acd6-1 reveals complex defense networks and leads to identification of novel defense genes in Arabidopsis. Plant J. Feb 10. [epub ahead of print] PMID: 19144005
Castillo, J.A., Greenberg, J.T. (2007) Evolutionary Dynamics of Ralstonia solanacearum. Appl Environ Microbiol. 73(4):1225-1238.
Lee, M.W., Lu, H., Jung, H.W., Greenberg, J.T. (2007) A key role for the Arabidopsis WIN3 protein in disease resistance triggered by Pseudomonas syringae that secrete AvrRpt2. Mol. Plant Microbe Interact. 20:1192-1200.
Jelenska, J., Yao, N., Vinatzer, B.A., Wright, C.M., Brodsky, J.L., Greenberg, J.T. (2007) A J-domain virulence effector of Pseudomonas syringae remodels host chloroplasts and suppresses defenses. Current Biology 17:499-508