Figures
After publication of this article [1], the corresponding author provided the underlying data supporting the published results. With the provision of these data, available in S1-S2 Files with this notice, this article [1] complies with PLOS’ Data Availability Policy.
The corresponding author clarified that the data in Fig 2 was plotted such that the surface plasmon resonance signal in the association phase (times between 0–60 s) was optimally represented in the plots, meaning some of the spikes are not shown in Fig 2. An updated caption for Fig 2 is provided here.
For Fig 3, the corresponding author stated that 10 replicates are present in panel A of Fig 3, and 9 or 8 replicates per inhibitor are present in panel B (two for the control with no inhibitor) as indicated in S1 File.
The corresponding author does not agree that a Correction is warranted to address the Data Availability issue.
The binding response of 6C3 exceeded the expected response for a 1:1 interaction, indicating multi-site binding. Compound 6E11 was used as a control. Data were fit to the steady-state affinity model. Fig 2 shows graphs which, for reasons of clarity, do not show the entire range of data. Please see S1 File for details.
Supporting information
S1 File. Underlying dataset supporting the results in Figures S2, 1A-C, 2, 3B, 4A-C, 5B and 6B-C, including values and calculations for mean, standard deviation and t-test.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1013758.s001
(XLSX)
S2 File. Underlying data supporting NMR spectra shown in Figures 4A and B.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1013758.s002
(ZIP)
Reference
Citation: The PLOS Pathogens Editors (2025) Correction: Nep1-like proteins as a target for plant pathogen control. PLoS Pathog 21(12): e1013758. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1013758
Published: December 17, 2025
Copyright: © 2025 The PLOS Pathogens Editors. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.