Abstract

When engaging in symbiosis with legume hosts, rhizobia are confronted with environmental changes, including nutrient availability and stress exposure. Genetic circuits allow responding to these environmental stimuli to optimize physiological adaptations during the switch from the free-living to the symbiotic life style. A pivotal regulatory system of the nitrogen-fixing soybean endosymbiont Bradyrhizobium diazoefficiens for efficient symbiosis is the general stress response (GSR), which relies on the alternative sigma factor σEcfG However, the GSR-controlled process required for symbiosis has not been identified. Here, we demonstrate that biosynthesis of trehalose is under GSR control, and mutants lacking the respective biosynthetic genes otsA and/or otsB phenocopy GSR-deficient mutants under symbiotic and selected free-living stress conditions. The role of trehalose as a cytoplasmic chemical chaperone and stress protectant can be functionally replaced in an otsA or otsB mutant by introducing heterologous genetic pathways for biosynthesis of the chemically unrelated compatible solutes glycine betaine and (hydroxy)ectoine. Alternatively, uptake of exogenously provided trehalose also restores efficient symbiosis and tolerance to hyperosmotic and hyperionic stress of otsA mutants. Hence, elevated cytoplasmic trehalose levels resulting from GSR-controlled biosynthesis are crucial for B. diazoefficiens cells to overcome adverse conditions during early stages of host infection and ensure synchronization with root nodule development.IMPORTANCE The Bradyrhizobium-soybean symbiosis is of great agricultural significance and serves as a model system for fundamental research in bacterium-plant interactions. While detailed molecular insight is available about mutual recognition and early nodule organogenesis, our understanding of the host-imposed conditions and the physiology of infecting rhizobia during the transition from a free-living state in the rhizosphere to endosymbiotic bacteroids is currently limited. In this study, we show that the requirement of the rhizobial general stress response (GSR) during host infection is attributable to GSR-controlled biosynthesis of trehalose. Specifically, trehalose is crucial for an efficient symbiosis by acting as a chemical chaperone to protect rhizobia from osmostress during host infection.

Highlights

  • When engaging in symbiosis with legume hosts, rhizobia are confronted with environmental changes, including nutrient availability and stress exposure

  • We found that mutants lacking either OtsA (T6P synthase) and/or OtsB (T6P phosphatase) phenocopy the DecfG mutant in symbiosis with soybean

  • The extracytoplasmic function sigma factor s EcfG is crucial for efficient host infection and nitrogen fixation

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Summary

Introduction

When engaging in symbiosis with legume hosts, rhizobia are confronted with environmental changes, including nutrient availability and stress exposure. Rhizobia are exposed to various types of stress conditions as free-living soil bacteria and during the transition to endosymbiotic bacteroids In the soil, they may encounter temperature, nutrient starvation, desiccation, or pH stress while they must cope with host-imposed, transient defense responses during infection of root tissue [6, 7]. Rhizobia like many bacteria have evolved functions and mechanisms to withstand different stress types and alleviate the consequences of stress-induced cellular damages These systems comprise chaperones, i.e., proteins that stabilize and protect proteins and other macromolecules [8,9,10,11,12,13], DNA repair systems [14], and reactive oxygen species (ROS)-detoxifying proteins [15,16,17,18,19,20] plus regulatory circuits to control the processes [21,22,23,24,25]

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