4.5 Article

Salt Stress Enhances Early Symbiotic Gene Expression in Medicago truncatula and Induces a Stress-Specific Set of Rhizobium-Responsive Genes

期刊

MOLECULAR PLANT-MICROBE INTERACTIONS
卷 34, 期 8, 页码 904-921

出版社

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/MPMI-01-21-0019-R

关键词

Medicago truncatula; nitrogen-fixation; NPL; NSP2; priming; RNA-seq; root nodules; salt stress; Sinorhizobium meliloti; succinoglycan; symbiosis; ENOD11; exopolysaccharides; exoS; exoY; hyperinduction; infection

资金

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [GM093628, P20GM103449]
  2. Gene Ontology
  3. Hatch [VT-H02104]
  4. Vermont Biomedical Research Network (VBRN) Bioinformatics Core

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Salt stress affects the molecular dialogue in legume plants and their symbiotic relationship with rhizobia, while salt and rhizobia influence the early symbiotic gene expression, dependent on Nod-factor and requiring NSP2. Inoculation with sucinoglycan mutants of S. meliloti under salt stress hyperinduces ENOD11 expression.
Salt stress is a major agricultural concern inhibiting not only plant growth but also the symbiotic association between legume roots and the soil bacteria rhizobia. This symbiotic association is initiated by a molecular dialogue between the two partners, leading to the activation of a signaling cascade in the legume host and, ultimately, the formation of nitrogen-fixing root nodules. Here, we show that a moderate salt stress increases the responsiveness of early symbiotic genes in Medicago truncatula to its symbiotic partner, Sinorhizobium meliloti while, conversely, inoculation with S. meliloti counteracts salt-regulated gene expression, restoring one-third to control levels. Our analysis of early nodulin 11 (ENOD11) shows that salt-induced expression is dynamic, Nod-factor dependent, and requires the ionic but not the osmotic component of salt. We demonstrate that salt stimulation of rhizobium-induced gene expression requires NSP2, which functions as a node to integrate the abiotic and biotic signals. In addition, our work reveals that inoculation with S. meliloti succinoglycan mutants also hyperinduces ENOD11 expression in the presence or absence of salt, suggesting a possible link between rhizobial exopolysaccharide and the plant response to salt stress. Finally, we identify an accessory set of genes that are induced by rhizobium only under conditions of salt stress and have not been previously identified as being nodulation-related genes. Our data suggest that interplay of core nodulation genes with different accessory sets, specific for different abiotic conditions, functions to establish the symbiosis. Together, our findings reveal a complex and dynamic interaction between plant, microbe, and environment.

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