4.8 Article

Nitrate restricts nodule organogenesis through inhibition of cytokinin biosynthesis in Lotus japonicus

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-26820-9

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Funding

  1. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  2. UK government's Department for International Development (DFID)
  3. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research [VENI863.15.010]

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Legumes balance nitrate signaling and symbiotic nitrogen fixation through cytokinin biosynthesis, with low nitrate conditions promoting cytokinin induction and high nitrate inhibiting it. This differential response is further seen in mutants, which show hypersensitivity to nitrate inhibition but can be rescued by cytokinin application. Nitrate's inhibitory effect on symbiosis occurs in a Nlp1 and Nlp4 dependent manner, contrasting with its positive influence on non-legumes.
Legumes balance nitrogen acquisition from soil nitrate with symbiotic nitrogen fixation. Nitrogen fixation requires establishment of a new organ, which is a cytokinin dependent developmental process in the root. We found cytokinin biosynthesis is a central integrator, balancing nitrate signalling with symbiotic acquired nitrogen. Low nitrate conditions provide a permissive state for induction of cytokinin by symbiotic signalling and thus nodule development. In contrast, high nitrate is inhibitory to cytokinin accumulation and nodule establishment in the root zone susceptible to nodule formation. This reduction of symbiotic cytokinin accumulation was further exacerbated in cytokinin biosynthesis mutants, which display hypersensitivity to nitrate inhibition of nodule development, maturation and nitrogen fixation. Consistent with this, cytokinin application rescues nodulation and nitrogen fixation of biosynthesis mutants in a concentration dependent manner. These inhibitory impacts of nitrate on symbiosis occur in a Nlp1 and Nlp4 dependent manner and contrast with the positive influence of nitrate on cytokinin biosynthesis that occurs in species that do not form symbiotic root nodules. Altogether this shows that legumes, as exemplified by Lotus japonicus, have evolved a different cytokinin response to nitrate compared to non-legumes.

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