| Literature DB >> 35812902 |
Johan Quilbé1, Jesús Montiel1,2, Jean-François Arrighi3, Jens Stougaard1.
Abstract
Establishment of the root-nodule symbiosis in legumes involves rhizobial infection of nodule primordia in the root cortex that is dependent on rhizobia crossing the root epidermal barrier. Two mechanisms have been described: either through root hair infection threads or through the intercellular passage of bacteria. Among the legume genera investigated, around 75% use root hair entry and around 25% the intercellular entry mode. Root-hair infection thread-mediated infection has been extensively studied in the model legumes Medicago truncatula and Lotus japonicus. In contrast, the molecular circuit recruited during intercellular infection, which is presumably an ancient and simpler pathway, remains poorly known. In recent years, important discoveries have been made to better understand the transcriptome response and the genetic components involved in legumes with obligate (Aeschynomene and Arachis spp.) and conditional (Lotus and Sesbania spp.) intercellular rhizobial infections. This review addresses these novel findings and briefly considers possible future research to shed light on the molecular players that orchestrate intercellular infection in legumes.Entities:
Keywords: Aeschynomene; Arachis; Lotus; Sesbania; intercellular symbiosis; legumes; nodule
Year: 2022 PMID: 35812902 PMCID: PMC9260380 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2022.922982
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 6.627
Figure 1(A) Phylogenetic relationship of the nitrogen-fixing clade (based on Sun et al., 2016; Shen and Bisseling, 2020) with special emphasis in the Fabaceae family (modified from Sprent et al., 2017). The red and blue circles highlight the genera where intercellular colonization by Frankia or Rhizobia occurs, respectively. The four species discussed in this review are marked in green (B). Intercellular infection mechanism in Aeschynomene evenia: the bradyrhizobium ORS278 intensively colonizes the axillary root hairs at the lateral root base and progresses between cells (1) to reach the cortex (2) where they could induce cell-collapse (3), before bacteria are finally internalized (4) and induce cell division (5). (C) Intercellular infection mechanism in Lotus japonicus: IRBG74 induce massive root hair curling and twisting, followed by intercellular infection of the root epidermis (1). In the cortical cells, IRBG74 is accumulated in infection pockets (2) and from these structures migrates to the nodule cells intercellularly (3) or through transcellular infection threads (4). The bacteria are released into the nodule cells from transcellular infection threads (5) or intercellular infection peg structures (6).
Figure 2Table comparing data on symbiotic genes involved in different nodulation steps in Arachis hypogaea, Aeschynomene evenia, Lotus japonicus, and Sesbania rostrata according to their symbionts. (A) Comparison of the presence (dark grey), absence (white), or unknown status (light grey) of symbiotic genes in the genome of A. hypogaea, A. evenia, L. japonicus, and S. rostrata. (B) Comparison of symbiotic genes that are induced (green), not induced (white) or of unknown status (grey) during nodulation in the four species. For L. japonicus this comparison includes the symbiont making intercellular infection (IRBG74) and intracellular infection (M. loti). (C) Comparison of the phenotypes with different genetic approaches (mutant or RNAi) in the four species and L. japonicus with the two symbionts. Red indicates absence of nodules (Nod-), orange indicates an intermediate strong phenotype (Nod+/−−), yellow indicates an intermediate weak phenotype (Nod+/−), and grey indicates the absence of data. For the Lotus-IRBG74 interaction, only transcriptome data of early time points is available (3, 5, and 10 dpi).