Abstract
Nitrogen (N) is an essential macronutrient for plant growth and productivity. Leguminous plants establish symbiotic relationships with nitrogen-fixing rhizobial bacteria to use atmospheric dinitrogen gas to meet high N demand under low-N conditions. Nodule formation and N fixation are energy-consuming processes and are inhibited by nitrate present in the environment. Previous studies in model leguminous plants characterized NIN-LIKE PROTEIN (NLP) proteins that mediate nitrate control of root nodule symbiosis, but the mechanism by which nitrate regulates soybean root nodules via NLP remains unclear. In the soybean genome we found four homologs of AtNLP7, named GmNLP7a–GmNLP7d. We showed that the expression of GmNLP7s is responsive to nitrate but not to rhizobial infection and localized GmNLP7a to the nucleus. Downregulation of GmNLP7s increased nodule number, and overexpression of GmNLP7a (GmNLP7aOE) reduced nodule number regardless of nitrate availability, suggesting a negative role for GmNLP7s in nodulation. Nitrogenase activity in the GmNLP7aOE line was comparable to that of the wild type, indicating that GmNLP7a does not affect mature nodule activity. Overexpression of GmNLP7a downregulated the expression of GmNIN1a and GmENOD40-1. GmNLP7a interacted with GmNIN1a via the PB1 domain. Our results reveal a new regulator of GmNLP7 in nodulation and a molecular mechanism by which nitrate affects nodule number in soybean.
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