| Literature DB >> 26286718 |
Pierre Czernic1, Djamel Gully1, Fabienne Cartieaux1, Lionel Moulin1, Ibtissem Guefrachi1, Delphine Patrel1, Olivier Pierre1, Joël Fardoux1, Clémence Chaintreuil1, Phuong Nguyen1, Frédéric Gressent1, Corinne Da Silva1, Julie Poulain1, Patrick Wincker1, Valérie Rofidal1, Sonia Hem1, Quentin Barrière1, Jean-François Arrighi1, Peter Mergaert1, Eric Giraud2.
Abstract
Nutritional symbiotic interactions require the housing of large numbers of microbial symbionts, which produce essential compounds for the growth of the host. In the legume-rhizobium nitrogen-fixing symbiosis, thousands of rhizobium microsymbionts, called bacteroids, are confined intracellularly within highly specialized symbiotic host cells. In Inverted Repeat-Lacking Clade (IRLC) legumes such as Medicago spp., the bacteroids are kept under control by an arsenal of nodule-specific cysteine-rich (NCR) peptides, which induce the bacteria in an irreversible, strongly elongated, and polyploid state. Here, we show that in Aeschynomene spp. legumes belonging to the more ancient Dalbergioid lineage, bacteroids are elongated or spherical depending on the Aeschynomene spp. and that these bacteroids are terminally differentiated and polyploid, similar to bacteroids in IRLC legumes. Transcriptome, in situ hybridization, and proteome analyses demonstrated that the symbiotic cells in the Aeschynomene spp. nodules produce a large diversity of NCR-like peptides, which are transported to the bacteroids. Blocking NCR transport by RNA interference-mediated inactivation of the secretory pathway inhibits bacteroid differentiation. Together, our results support the view that bacteroid differentiation in the Dalbergioid clade, which likely evolved independently from the bacteroid differentiation in the IRLC clade, is based on very similar mechanisms used by IRLC legumes.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26286718 PMCID: PMC4587450 DOI: 10.1104/pp.15.00584
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Physiol ISSN: 0032-0889 Impact factor: 8.340