| Literature DB >> 32093403 |
Vinay Sharma1, Samrat Bhattacharyya2,3, Rakesh Kumar4, Ashish Kumar1,5, Fernando Ibañez6, Jianping Wang7, Baozhu Guo8, Hari K Sudini1, Subramaniam Gopalakrishnan1, Maitrayee DasGupta2, Rajeev K Varshney1, Manish K Pandey1.
Abstract
Nitrogen is one of the essential plant nutrients and a major factor limiting crop productivity. To meet the requirements of sustainable agriculture, there is a need to maximize biological nitrogen fixation in different crop species. Legumes are able to establish root nodule symbiosis (RNS) with nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria which are collectively called rhizobia. This mutualistic association is highly specific, and each rhizobia species/strain interacts with only a specific group of legumes, and vice versa. Nodulation involves multiple phases of interactions ranging from initial bacterial attachment and infection establishment to late nodule development, characterized by a complex molecular signalling between plants and rhizobia. Characteristically, legumes like groundnut display a bacterial invasion strategy popularly known as "crack-entry'' mechanism, which is reported approximately in 25% of all legumes. This article accommodates critical discussions on the bacterial infection mode, dynamics of nodulation, components of symbiotic signalling pathway, and also the effects of abiotic stresses and phytohormone homeostasis related to the root nodule symbiosis of groundnut and Bradyrhizobium. These parameters can help to understand how groundnut RNS is programmed to recognize and establish symbiotic relationships with rhizobia, adjusting gene expression in response to various regulations. This review further attempts to emphasize the current understanding of advancements regarding RNS research in the groundnut and speculates on prospective improvement possibilities in addition to ways for expanding it to other crops towards achieving sustainable agriculture and overcoming environmental challenges.Entities:
Keywords: Arachis hypogaea; Rhizobium; crack-entry; groundnut; legume; nod factor; peanut; phytohormones; root nodule symbiosis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32093403 PMCID: PMC7076665 DOI: 10.3390/plants9020276
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1Mode of infection and nodule types among legumes including groundnut (Arachis hypogaea).
Figure 2Rhizobial invasion can occur either through root hairs or cracks epidermis. (A) Root hair invasion is initiated by rhizobial adhesion to root hairs and root hair deformation. Infection thread initiates from this invasion and allows rhizobial invasion of the cortex. Concomitant with these epidermal responses, cortical cells activate cell division for nodule primordium. (B) Crack/intercellular invasion breached the epidermis and rhizobia get direct access to cortical cells.
List of legumes exclusively showing ‘crack-entry’ mode of infection, with their systematic affiliations, the names of rhizobial partners and the specific features of nodules (legume phylogenetic clades are mentioned within brackets; MCC-Mimoseae–Cassieae–Caesalpinieae).
| ‘Crack-entry’ Legumes | Systematic Position within Leguminosae (Fabaceae) | Symbiotic Partner Rhizobia | Distinctive Features of Nodule | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Sub family: Papilionoideae | Aeschynomenoid type, oblate-spheroid, root junctions with axillary hairs | [ | |
|
| Sub family: Papilionoideae |
| Aeschynomenoid affinities, spherical, ‘open basket’ nodule meristem. | [ |
|
| Sub family: Papilionoideae | Aeschynomenoid type, oblate, root junctions with axillary hairs. | [ | |
|
| Sub family: Papilionoideae | Aeschynomenoid type, spheroid, root and stem nodules. | [ | |
|
| Sub family: |
| Mimosoid, unbranched- elongated, aquatic infection environment. | [ |
|
| Sub family: Mimosoideae |
| Mimosoid, unbranched- elongated, broad symbiont range. | [ |
|
| Sub family: Caesalpinioideae |
| Caesalpiniod type, rigid, hemispherical with fixation threads. | [ |
Figure 3Successive stages of nodule development in groundnut and “crack-entry” invasion of Bradyrhizobium.
Summary of the transcriptomics-based identification of candidate genes and transcription factors involved in root nodule symbiosis in legumes.
| RNS Progress | Key Genes /TFs | Functional Description |
|---|---|---|
| Bacterial Recognition |
| Initiate host response |
|
| Recognition of symbiotic signals | |
|
| Role in Recognition of Nod factor and host-symbiont compatibility | |
| Early signalling and SYM pathway |
| Encode putative ion channel protein |
|
| Plays a role in symbiotic calcium oscillations in SYM pathway | |
|
| DNA-binding transcriptional activator induces nodule development | |
| Early Transcription factor |
| Role in transcriptional reprogramming for initiation of root nodule symbiosis |
|
| Controls rhizobial infection | |
| Infection |
| Encode heptameric ARP2/3 nucleator—essential for the intracellular accommodation of rhizobial bacteria |
|
| Role in infection thread formation, growth, and differentiation of nodules | |
| Cell division |
| Role in nodule organogenesis |
|
| Plays a role in cytokinin pathway which positively regulates symbiotic nodulation | |
| Nodule regulation |
| Plays a key role in plant–microbe interaction |
|
| Transcriptional regulator of symbiotic nodule development | |
|
| Maintaining cytokinin homeostasis during root and nodule development | |
|
| Role in systematic autoregulation of nodulation (AON) pathway that negatively regulates nodule number | |
|
| Long-distance regulation of legume–rhizobium symbiosis | |
|
| Role in infection and nodule development | |
|
| Key regulators of nitrogen responses and of gametophyte development |
Summary of phytohormones and their regulatory effects on nodulation.
| Plant Hormones | Overall Influence on Nodulation | Mechanism of Regulation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cytokinin | Positive | ● Ligand for HK1, essential for cortical signalling | [ |
| Auxin | Positive | ● Required in nodule meristem for cortical division | [ |
| Gibberellin | Negative | ● Nod factor triggered negative feedback maintenance | [ |
| Ethylene | Negative / Positive | ● Downregulates defense response gene | [ |
| Abscisic acid | Negative / Positive | ● Increases lateral root density (LDR) in legumes | [ |
Figure 4Deployment of molecular-omics approaches will help in the characterization of important genes in RNS. First, the investigated natural nodule variation in groundnut is shown, then the functional genomics technologies, and the integrative data analysis used to prioritize candidate genes. Finally, genes important for various stages of symbiosis are identified and validated.