Abstract

Plants within the Nitrogen-fixing Clade (NFC) of Angiosperms form root nodule symbioses with nitrogen-fixing bacteria. Actinorhizal plants (in Cucurbitales, Fagales, Rosales) form symbioses with the actinobacteria Frankia while legumes (Fabales) form symbioses with proteobacterial rhizobia. Flavonoids, secondary metabolites of the phenylpropanoid pathway, have been shown to play major roles in legume root nodule symbioses: as signal molecules that in turn trigger rhizobial nodulation initiation signals and acting as polar auxin transport inhibitors, enabling a key step in nodule organogenesis. To explore a potentially broader role for flavonoids in root nodule symbioses across the NFC, we combined metabolomic and transcriptomic analyses of roots and nodules of the actinorhizal host Datisca glomerata and legumes of the genus Medicago. Patterns of biosynthetic pathways were inferred from flavonoid metabolite profiles and phenylpropanoid gene expression patterns in the two hosts to identify similarities and differences. Similar classes of flavonoids were represented in both hosts, and an increase in flavonoids generally in the nodules was observed, with differences in flavonoids prominent in each host. While both hosts produced derivatives of naringenin, the metabolite profile in D. glomerata indicated an emphasis on the pinocembrin biosynthetic pathway, and an abundance of flavonols with potential roles in symbiosis. Additionally, the gene expression profile indicated a decrease in expression in the lignin/monolignol pathway. In Medicago sativa, by contrast, isoflavonoids were highly abundant featuring more diverse and derived isoflavonoids than D. glomerata. Gene expression patterns supported these differences in metabolic pathways, especially evident in a difference in expression of cinnamic acid 4-hydroxylase (C4H), which was expressed at substantially lower levels in D. glomerata than in a Medicago truncatula transcriptome where it was highly expressed. C4H is a major rate-limiting step in phenylpropanoid biosynthesis that separates the pinocembrin pathway from the lignin/monolignol and naringenin-based flavonoid branches. Shikimate O-hydroxycinnamoyltransferase, the link between flavonoid biosynthesis and the lignin/monolignol pathway, was also expressed at much lower levels in D. glomerata than in M. truncatula. Our results indicate (a) a likely major role for flavonoids in actinorhizal nodules, and (b) differences in metabolic flux in flavonoid and phenylpropanoid biosynthesis between the different hosts in symbiosis.

Highlights

  • Root nodule symbioses (RNS) develop as symbiotic associations between nitrogen-fixing bacteria and certain host plants, resulting in the formation of the root nodule, a specialized organ for nitrogen fixation and assimilation

  • Metabolites were matched against spectra from an mass spectrometry (MS)/MS library at high levels of identification (MSI Level 1, 2, or 3) and the rest were reclassified as unknowns (Supplementary Table S2)

  • Our results indicate that molecules in the pinocembrin pathway, including galangin and datiscetin, are possible candidates for a similar role in D. glomerata, because they are synthesized in great abundance (Figure 3) and are synthesized by uninoculated roots as well as inoculated roots and nodules (Figure 5) suggesting they are present in roots before the roots are infected

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Root nodule symbioses (RNS) develop as symbiotic associations between nitrogen-fixing bacteria and certain host plants, resulting in the formation of the root nodule, a specialized organ for nitrogen fixation and assimilation. Cells within the developing nodule undergo endoreduplication, increasing in volume and becoming more transcriptionally active to promote symbiotic interactions (Vinardell et al, 2003). In both the legume and actinorhizal symbioses several of the initial steps in the internal signaling pathway leading to nodule establishment are conserved. Initial signaling interactions are activated via the Common Symbiotic Pathway, a set of genes shared with the more ancient arbuscular mycorrhizal symbioses (Oldroyd, 2013), indicating a shared evolutionary origin within the NFC (Markmann and Parniske, 2009; Battenberg et al, 2018), followed by a RNS-specific gene expression cascade (Oldroyd, 2013)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call