The initiation of intracellular infection of legume roots by symbiotic rhizobia bacteria and arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM) fungi is preceded by the induction of calcium signatures in and around the nucleus of root epidermal cells. Although a calcium and calmodulin-dependent kinase (CCaMK) is a key mediator of symbiotic root responses, the decoding of the calcium signal and the molecular events downstream are only poorly understood. Here, we characterize Lotus japonicus cyclops mutants on which microbial infection was severely inhibited. In contrast, nodule organogenesis was initiated in response to rhizobia, but arrested prematurely. This arrest was overcome when a deregulated CCaMK mutant version was introduced into cyclops mutants, conferring the development of full-sized, spontaneous nodules. Because cyclops mutants block symbiotic infection but are competent for nodule development, they reveal a bifurcation of signal transduction downstream of CCaMK. We identified CYCLOPS by positional cloning. CYCLOPS carries a functional nuclear localization signal and a predicted coiled-coil domain. We observed colocalization and physical interaction between CCaMK and CYCLOPS in plant and yeast cell nuclei in the absence of symbiotic stimulation. Importantly, CYCLOPS is a phosphorylation substrate of CCaMK in vitro. Cyclops mutants of rice were impaired in AM, and rice CYCLOPS could restore symbiosis in Lotus cyclops mutants, indicating a functional conservation across angiosperms. Our results suggest that CYCLOPS forms an ancient, preassembled signal transduction complex with CCaMK that is specifically required for infection, whereas organogenesis likely requires additional yet-to-be identified CCaMK interactors or substrates.BiFC ͉ map-based cloning ͉ plant-microbe symbiosis ͉ protein phosphorylation ͉ protein-protein interaction L egume plants can establish endosymbiotic interactions with nitrogen-fixing rhizobia and phosphate-delivering arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM) fungi. Plant root hairs form a tight curl in which rhizobia are entrapped. From this closed infection pocket, the bacteria are guided by plant membrane-delimited infection threads (ITs) into the root nodule, a specialized organ developed by the plant to provide an optimized environment for nitrogen fixation (1). AM fungal hyphae are guided through epidermal and cortical cells toward the inner cortex (2), where arbuscules, highly branched intracellular symbiotic structures, are formed (3). Intracellular infection by rhizobia and AM fungi is preceded by an exchange of specific signaling molecules. Rhizobia produce lipochito-oligosaccharides (Nod factors) that activate host plant responses including root hair deformation, and preinfection thread formation, which are structures that determine the path of IT growth through the root (4), and initiation of cortical cell division (1). One of the earliest plant responses to stimulation by Nod factors is Ca 2ϩ -spiking, which consists of perinuclear oscillations of calcium concentration in root cells (5). In the legume
The roots of most higher plants form arbuscular mycorrhiza, an ancient, phosphate-acquiring symbiosis with fungi, whereas only four related plant orders are able to engage in the evolutionary younger nitrogen-fixing root-nodule symbiosis with bacteria. Plant symbioses with bacteria and fungi require a set of common signal transduction components that redirect root cell development. Here we present two highly homologous genes from Lotus japonicus, CASTOR and POLLUX, that are indispensable for microbial admission into plant cells and act upstream of intracellular calcium spiking, one of the earliest plant responses to symbiotic stimulation. Surprisingly, both twin proteins are localized in the plastids of root cells, indicating a previously unrecognized role of this ancient endosymbiont in controlling intracellular symbioses that evolved more recently.
A new nodulation-defective mutant of Lotus japonicus does not initiate nodule cortical cell division in response to Mesorhizobium loti, but induces root hair deformation, Nod factor-induced calcium spiking, and mycorrhization. This phenotype, together with mapping data, suggested that the mutation could be in the ortholog of the Medicago truncatula NSP1 gene (MtNSP1). The sequence of the orthologous gene (LjNSP1) in the L. japonicus mutant (Ljnsp1-1) revealed a mutation causing a premature stop resulting in loss of the C-terminal 23 amino acids. We also sequenced the NSP2 gene from L. japonicus (LjNSP2). A mutant (Ljnsp2-3) with a premature stop codon was identified by TILLING showing a similar phenotype to Ljnsp1-1. Both LjNSP1 and LjNSP2 are predicted GRAS (GAI, RGA, SCR) domain transcriptional regulators. Transcript steady-state levels of LjNSP1 and LjNSP2 initially decreased and then increased following infection by M. loti. In hairy root transformations, LjNSP1 and MtNSP1 complemented both Mtnsp1-1 and Ljnsp1-1 mutants, demonstrating that these orthologous proteins have a conserved biochemical function. A Nicotiana benthamiana NSP1-like gene (NbNSP1) was shown to restore nodule formation in both Ljnsp1-1 and Mtnsp1-1 mutants, indicating that NSP1 regulators from legumes and non-legumes can propagate the Nod factor-induced signal, activating appropriate downstream targets. The L. japonicus nodules complemented with NbNSP1 contained some cells with abnormal bacteroids and could fix nitrogen. However, the NbNSP1-complemented M. truncatula nodules did not fix nitrogen and contained very few bacteria released from infection threads. These observations suggest that NSP1 is also involved in infection, bacterial release, and normal bacteroid formation in nodule cells.Legumes produce root nodules in response to Nod factors secreted by rhizobia. These Nod factor signals are essential for root hair deformation, induction of early nodulation genes, formation of nodule primordia, and infection by rhizobia. The earliest plant responses to Nod factors include an influx of calcium, plasmamembrane depolarizations, and then induction of cytosolic calcium spiking around the nucleus of epidermal root cells (Oldroyd and Downie, 2004). Purified Nod factors are sufficient to cause a range of early responses involved in the host developmental program (Hirsch and Fang, 1994;Schultze and Kondorosi, 1998;Downie and Walker, 1999). The Nod factors are the principle determinants by which legumes can be nodulated by specific rhizobia; the basis for this host specificity is the structure of the Nod factor, suggesting that highly specific plant receptors perceive Nod factor signals, thereby initiating the plant developmental response.Nod factor-induced root hair deformation is associated with reorganization of actin filaments in preparation for infection (Cardenas et al., 1998;Sieberer et al., 2005). The root hairs bend back, entrapping bacteria and thereby allowing infection foci to form as entrapped microcolonies. The infection thread, i...
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