Abstract
Sulfur is an essential nutrient in plants as a constituent element of some amino acids, metal cofactors, coenzymes, and secondary metabolites. Not surprisingly, sulfur deficiency decreases plant growth, photosynthesis, and seed yield in both legumes and non-legumes. In nodulated legumes, sulfur supply is positively linked to symbiotic nitrogen fixation (SNF) and sulfur starvation causes three additional major effects: decrease of nodulation, inhibition of SNF, and slowing down of nodule metabolism. These effects are due, at least in part, to the impairment of nitrogenase biosynthesis and activity, the accumulation of nitrogen-rich amino acids, and the decline in leghemoglobin, ferredoxin, ATP, and glucose in nodules. During the last decade, some major advances have been made about the uptake and metabolism of sulfur in nodules. These include the identification of the sulfate transporter SST1 in the symbiosomal membrane, the finding that glutathione produced in the bacteroids and host cells is essential for nodule activity, and the demonstration that sulfur assimilation in the whole plant is reprogrammed during symbiosis. However, many crucial questions still remain and some examples follow. In the first place, it is of paramount importance to elucidate the mechanism by which sulfur deficiency limits SNF. It is unknown why homoglutahione replaces glutathione as a major water-soluble antioxidant, redox buffer, and sulfur reservoir, among other relevant functions, only in certain legumes and also in different tissues of the same legume species. Much more work is required to identify oxidative post-translational modifications entailing cysteine and methionine residues and to determine how these modifications affect protein function and metabolism in nodules. Likewise, most interactions of antioxidant metabolites and enzymes bearing redox-active sulfur with transcription factors need to be defined. Solving these questions will pave the way to decipher sulfur-dependent mechanisms that regulate SNF, thereby gaining a deep insight into how nodulated legumes adapt to the fluctuating availability of nutrients in the soil.
Highlights
The lower symbiotic nitrogen fixation (SNF) in sulfur-deficient plants may be attributed to a decrease in nodulation and to a direct effect on nitrogenase and a general down-regulation of nodule metabolism
In this minireview, we will address the central role of sulfur in symbiotic nitrogen fixation (SNF)
The bacteria become entrapped within organelle-like structures termed symbiosomes, where the bacteria differentiate into bacteroids
Summary
The lower SNF in sulfur-deficient plants may be attributed to a decrease in nodulation and to a direct effect on nitrogenase and a general down-regulation of nodule metabolism. Sulfite is reduced by sulfite reductase (CysIJ) to sulfide, which is incorporated into O-acetylserine by cysteine synthase (CysK) to produce Cys. This amino acid may be used for the synthesis of proteins, Met, and the tripeptide glutathione (GSH; γGluCys-Gly).
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