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1.
Lipochitooligosaccharide Nod signals are important determinants of host specificity in the Rhizobium -legume symbiosis. The most rapid response of plant cells to the R. meliloti Nod signal NodRm-IV(C16:2,S) reported so far is the depolarization of the plasma membrane potential in alfalfa root hairs. In order to investigate whether this response may be part of a specific signal transduction cascade involved in the nodulation process, its specificity was studied with respect to host-specific modifications of the lipochitooligosaccharide. Five different Nod factors displaying different degrees of activity in inducing root hair deformation or cortical cell divisions on alfalfa were tested. The ability of the Nod factors to elicit plasma membrane depolarization correlated well with their activity in the bioassays. Removal of the sulfate group (NodRm-IV(C16:2)) led to inactivation of the Nod factor. An increase in the length of the chitooligosaccharide backbone (NodRm-V(C16:2,S)) or saturation of the acyl chain (NodRm-IV(C16:0,S)) resulted in severely reduced activity. In contrast, the O -acetyl group at the non-reducing terminus in NodRm-IV(Ac,C16:2,S), which confers substantially higher activity in long-term bioassays, did not enhance plasma membrane depolarization significantly in comparison with the non- O -acetylated factor. Thus, the rapid plasma membrane response is differentially sensitive to various structural motifs of the lipochitooligosaccharide. These data suggest that the different substituents modifying the basic Nod factor structure may have distinct functions, not all of them contributing to the interaction with a putative receptor in root hair cells. However, the overall specificity of the membrane depolarization for the cognate Nod factors raises the possibility that it is involved in a Nod signal transduction pathway.  相似文献   

2.
Nod factors are signaling molecules secreted by Rhizobium bacteria. These lipo-chitooligosaccharides (LCOs) are required for symbiosis with legumes and can elicit specific responses at subnanomolar concentrations on a compatible host. How plants perceive LCOs is unclear. In this study, using fluorescent Nod factor analogs, we investigated whether sulfated and nonsulfated Nod factors were bound and perceived differently by Medicago truncatula and Vicia sativa root hairs. The bioactivity of three novel sulfated fluorescent LCOs was tested in a root hair deformation assay on M. truncatula, showing bioactivity down to 0.1 to 1 nM. Fluorescence microscopy of plasmolyzed M. truncatula root hairs shows that sulfated fluorescent Nod factors accumulate in the cell wall of root hairs, whereas they are absent from the plasma membrane when applied at 10 nM. When the fluorescent Nod factor distribution in medium surrounding a root was studied, a sharp decrease in fluorescence close to the root hairs was observed, visualizing the remarkable capacity of root hairs to absorb Nod factors from the medium. Fluorescence correlation microscopy was used to study in detail the mobilities of sulfated and nonsulfated fluorescent Nod factors which are biologically active on M. truncatula and V. sativa, respectively. Remarkably, no difference between sulfated and nonsulfated Nod factors was observed: both hardly diffuse and strongly accumulate in root hair cell walls of both M. truncatula and V. sativa. The implications for the mode of Nod factor perception are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Carden DE  Felle HH 《Planta》2003,216(6):993-1002
Medicago sativa L. (alfalfa) root hairs respond to Nod factors [NodRm-IV(C16:2,S)] in a host-specific manner with depolarization and rapid ion fluxes. Protoplasts prepared from these cells using the cell wall-digesting enzymes pectolyase and cellulase do not, or to a rather small extent, respond to Nod factors. In an effort to understand this activity loss we analyzed the mode of action of both enzymes with respect to their effects on the root hairs as well as their interference with the Nod factor response. (i) In the presence of the enzymes, Nod factor at saturating concentrations neither depolarized the plasma membrane of root hairs nor caused ion fluxes. Even after removal of the enzymes, Nod factor responses were strongly refractory. (ii) After a lag-phase of 12-18 s, pectolyase depolarized the plasma membrane, alkalized the external space, acidified the cytosol and increased the cytosolic Ca(2+) activity. (iii) Cellulase, without a lag-phase, depolarized the plasma membrane, acidified the cytosol, but only marginally increased the cytosolic Ca(2+) activity. Unlike pectolyase, the cellulase response was only weakly refractory to a second addition. (iv) Neither enzyme increased the membrane conductance, but pectolyase inhibited the H(+)-pump. (v) Pectolyase shows all the signs of an elicitor, while cellulase yields a mixed response. (vi) Denatured enzymes yielded strong effects similar to those of untreated enzymes. We conclude that the effects shown do not originate from enzymatic activity, but from interactions of the proteins with cell wall or plasma membrane constituents. It is further concluded that these enzymes (pectolyase more so than cellulase) trigger defense-related signal pathways, which makes protoplasts prepared with such enzymes unsuitable for studies of symbiotic or defense-related signalling.  相似文献   

4.
D'Haeze W  Holsters M 《Glycobiology》2002,12(6):79R-105R
The onset of nodule development, the result of rhizobia-legume symbioses, is determined by the exchange of chemical compounds between microsymbiont and leguminous host plant. Lipo-chitooligosaccharidic nodulation (Nod) factors, secreted by rhizobia, belong to these signal molecules. Nod factors consist of an acylated chitin oligomeric backbone with various substitutions at the (non)reducing-terminal and/or nonterminal residues. They induce the formation and deformation of root hairs, intra- and extracellular alkalinization, membrane potential depolarization, changes in ion fluxes, early nodulin gene expression, and formation of nodule primordia. Nod factors play a key role during nodule initiation and act at nano- to picomolar concentrations. A correct chemical structure is required for induction of a particular plant response, suggesting that Nod factor-receptor interaction(s) precede(s) a Nod factor-induced signal transduction cascade. Current data on Nod factor structures and Nod factor-induced responses are highlighted as well as recent advances in the characterization of proteins, possibly involved in recognition of Nod factors by the host plant.  相似文献   

5.
Fluorescence correlation microscopy (FCM) is a new single-molecule detection technique based on the confocal principle to quantify molecular diffusion and concentration of fluorescent molecules (particles) with sub-micron resolution. In this study, FCM is applied to examine the diffusional behaviour of fluorescent Nod factor analogues on living Vicia sativa root hairs. Three recently described Nod factors with a fluorescent acyl chain (Goedhart et al. Biochemistry 1999, 38, 10898-10907) were used. Plasmolysis of fluorescently labelled root hairs showed that the Nod factors are predominantly located in the cell wall, as hardly any fluorescence could be detected in the plasma membrane. After Nod factor-induced root hair deformation, the new outgrowth was not labelled, indicating a lack of migration of Nod factors to the newly synthesized cell wall. In agreement, FCM showed a > 1,000-fold reduction of molecular mobility of the fluorescence Nod factors upon binding to the cell wall. In addition, FCM demonstrated that Nod factors, when exogenously applied in aqueous solution at 10 nM, markedly concentrate in the cell wall of root hairs (up to 50-fold). The feasibility of applying FCM for the study of living plant cells as well as the implications of our results for the perception of Nod factors are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Nod factors are lipo-chito-oligosaccharides secreted by Rhizobium to initiate deformation of root hairs and other changes in host plants. Since Nod factor-induced changes in intracellular calcium occur in responsive root hairs, we tested if phospholipase C (PLC) activity is stimulated by Nod factors. Plasma membranes were isolated from the nodulation-competent zone of roots of Vigna unguiculata to assay PLC activity in vitro. Nod factors isolated from Rhizobium sp. NGR234, NodNGR[S] and NodNGR[Ac] significantly increased PLC activity and this increase in activity was inhibited in the presence of the PLC inhibitors, neomycin and U-73122. The response appears specific as PLC activity was not significantly induced neither by the 4-sugar, N,N',N',N' -tetracetylchitotetraose (TACT), or the five-sugar, penta- N -acetylchitopentaose (PACT), backbone of Nod factors. The G-protein activators, GTP γ S and the aluminium fluoride complex, had no effect on PLC activity in the presence or absence of NodNGR[S], suggesting that Nod factors act independently of G-proteins in vitro. However, the combination of oleic acid and TACT mimicked the effect of Nod factors on PLC activity indicating that the presence of the lipid tail may be critical. Also this combination of compounds acted synergistically together to evoke root hair deformation in vivo. Our results indicate that Nod factors can modulate membrane delimited PLC activity and indicate that PLC is likely to be a component of the Nod factor-signalling pathway.  相似文献   

7.
Kelly MN  Irving HR 《Planta》2003,216(4):674-685
Nod factors are lipo-chito-oligosaccharides secreted by rhizobia that initiate many responses in the root hairs of the legume hosts, culminating in deformed hairs. The heterotrimeric G-protein agonists mastoparan, Mas7, melittin, compound 48/80 and cholera toxin provoke root hair deformation, whereas the heterotrimeric G-protein antagonist pertussis toxin inhibits mastoparan and Nod factor NodNGR[S]- (from Rhizobiumsp. NGR234) induced root hair deformation. Another heterotrimeric G-protein antagonist, isotetrandrine, only inhibited root hair deformation provoked by mastoparan and melittin. These results support the notion that G-proteins are implicated in Nod factor signalling. To study the role of G-proteins at a biochemical level, we examined the GTP-binding profiles of root microsomal membrane fractions isolated from the nodulation competent zone of Vigna unguiculata(L.) Walp. GTP competitively bound to the microsomal membrane fractions labelled with [(35)S]GTPgammaS, yielding a two-site displacement curve with displacement constants ( K(i)) of 0.58 micro M and 0.16 mM. Competition with either ATP or GDP revealed a one-site displacement curve with K(i) of 4.4 and 29 micro M, respectively, whereas ADP and UTP were ineffective competitors. The GTP-binding profiles of microsomal membrane fractions isolated from roots pretreated with either NodNGR[S] or the four-sugar, N- N'- N"- N'"-tetracetylchitotetraose (TACT) backbone of Nod factors were significantly altered compared with control microsomal fractions. To identify candidate proteins, membrane proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and electrotransferred to nitrocellulose. GTP overlay experiments revealed that membrane fractions isolated from roots pretreated with NodNGR[S] or TACT contained two proteins (28 kDa and 25 kDa) with a higher affinity for GTPgammaS than control membrane fractions. Western analysis demonstrated that membranes from the pretreated roots contained more of another protein (~55 kDa) recognised by Galpha(common) antisera. These results provide pharmacological and biochemical evidence supporting the contention that G-proteins are involved in Nod factor signalling and, importantly, implicate monomeric G-proteins in this process.  相似文献   

8.
Suboptimal growth conditions, such as low rhizosphere temperature, high salinity, and low pH can negatively affect the rhizobia-legume symbioses, resulting in poor nodulation and lower amounts of nitrogen fixed. Early stages of the Bradyrhizobium japonicum-soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] symbiosis, such as excretion of genistein (the plant-to-bacteria signal) and infection initiation can be inhibited by abiotic stresses; however, the effect on early events modulated by Nod factors (bacteria-to-plant signalling), particularly root hair deformations is unknown. Thus, the objective of this study was to evaluate the perception of Nod factor by soybean root hairs under three stress conditions: low temperature, low pH, and high salinity. Three experiments were conducted using a 1:1 ratio of Nod Bj-V (C(18:1), MeFuc) and Nod Bj-V (Ac, C(16:0), MeFuc). Nod factor induced four types of root hair deformation (HAD), wiggling, bulging, curling, and branching. Under optimal experimental conditions root hair response to the three levels of Nod factor tested (10(-6), 10(-8), and 10(-10) M) was dose-dependent. The highest frequency of root hair deformations was elicited by the 10(-6) M level. Root hair deformation decreased with temperature (25, 17, and 15 degrees C), low pH, and high salinity. Nod factor concentration did not interact with either low temperature or pH. However, salinity strongly inhibited HAD responses to increases in Nod factor concentration. Thus, the addition of higher levels of Nod factor is able to overcome the effects of low pH and temperature stress, but not salinity.  相似文献   

9.
In root hairs of alfalfa (Medicago sativa), the requirement of Ca(2+) for Nod factor signaling has been investigated by means of ion-selective microelectrodes. Measured 50 to 100 microm behind the growing tip, 0.1 microM NodRm-IV(C16:2,S) increased the cytosolic free [Ca2+] by about 0.2 pCa, while the same concentration of chitotetraose, the nonactive glucosamine backbone, had no effect. We demonstrate that NodRm-IV(C16:2,S) still depolarized the plasma membrane at external Ca(2+) concentrations below cytosolic values if the free EGTA concentration remained low (相似文献   

10.
Nod factor [NodRm-IV(Ac,S)], isolated from the bacterium Rhizobium meliloti, induces a well-known depolarization in Medicago sativa (cv Sitel) root hairs. Analysis of this membrane response using the discontinuous single-electrode voltage-clamp technique (dSEVC) shows that anion channel, K+ channel and H+-ATPase pump currents are involved in young growing root hairs. The early Nod-factor-induced depolarization is due to increase of the inward ion current and inhibition of the H+ pump. It involved an instantaneous inward anion current (IIAC) and/or a time-dependent inward K+ current (IRKC). These two ion currents are then down-regulated while the H+ pump is stimulated, allowing long-term rectification of the membrane potential (Em). Our results support the idea that the regulation of inward current plays a primary role in the Nod-factor-induced electrical response, the nature of the ions carried by these currents depending on the activated anion and/or K+ channels at the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

11.
Fusarium spp. are ubiquitous fungi found in soil worldwide as both pathogenic and nonpathogenic strains. The signals leading to disease or the absence of disease are poorly understood. We recently showed that fusaric acid (FA), a nonspecific toxin produced by most Fusarium spp., could elicit various plant defense responses at 100 nM without toxic effect. In this study, we checked for the effect of FA on root and root hairs, probable first site of contact between the fungi and the host. Large FA concentrations reduce root and root-hair growth and induce a rapid transient membrane hyperpolarization, followed by a large depolarization, due to the inhibition of H(+)-ATPase currents. Nanomolar concentrations of FA induced only an early transient membrane hyperpolarization of root hairs compatible with the induction of a signal transduction pathway. FA at 10(-7) M failed to induce salicylic acid- and jasmonic acid/ethylene-dependent defense-related genes but inhibited the germination of the angiosperm parasite Orobanche ramosa in contact of FA-pretreated Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings. These data suggest that FA at nontoxic concentrations could activate signal transduction components necessary for plant-defense responses that could contribute to biocontrol activity of Fusarium spp.  相似文献   

12.
We used a semiquantitative root hair deformation assay for Vicia sativa (vetch) to study the activity of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv viciae nodulation (Nod) factors. Five to 10 min of Nod factor-root interaction appears to be sufficient to induce root hair deformation. The first deformation is visible within 1 h, and after 3 h about 80% of the root hairs in a small susceptible zone of the root are deformed. This zone encompasses root hairs that have almost reached their maximal size. The Nod factor accumulates preferentially to epidermal cells of the young part of the root, but is not restricted to the susceptible zone. In the interaction with roots, the glucosamine backbone of Nod factors is shortened, presumably by chitinases. NodRlv-IV(C18:4,Ac) is more stable than NodRlv-V(C18:4,Ac). No correlation was found between Nod factor degradation and susceptibility. Degradation occurs both in the susceptible zone and in the mature zone. Moreover, degradation is not affected by NH4NO3 and is similar in vetch and in the nonhost alfalfa (Medicago sativa).  相似文献   

13.
Rhizobial lipochitooligosaccharides (Nod factors) function as symbiotic signals that trigger root hair deformations and cortical cell divisions on the roots of leguminous plants in a host-specific manner. By using pH-sensitive microelectrodes, it is shown that alfalfa root hair cells respond to Rhizobium meliloti Nod factors with a rapid intracellular alkalinization of 0.2–0.3 pH units. This alkalinization remained as long as the Nod factor was present, but slowly reversed after removal of the signal. The response was most sensitive to the sulfated tetrameric Nod factor, NodRm-IV(C16:2,S), which is morphogenic on the host plant alfalfa, suggesting a role in a signal transduction cascade. Non-sulfated Nod factor as well as chitooligosaccharides elicited a pHc change only at elevated concentrations. The increase of PHc in response to sulfated Nod factor was concomitant with a depolarization of the plasma membrane potential whereas the PHc change in response to non-sulfated Nod factor occurred in the absence of membrane depolarization. In addition, whereas a first dose of sulfated Nod factor inhibited the subsequent response to a second dose of the same molecule, it did not significantly repress the activity of non-sulfated Nod factor. These results indicate that sulfated and non-sulfated Nod factors act independently and suggest the existence of two Nod signal perception systems, one transmitting the host-specific signal, the other representing an ancient reception system for a generic Nod factor structure.  相似文献   

14.
In many common legumes, when host-specific nodule bacteria meettheir legume root they attach to it and enter through root hairs.The bacteria can intrude these cells because they instigatein the hairs the formation of an inward growing tube, the infectionthread, which consists of wall material. Prior to infectionthread formation, the bacteria exploit the cell machinery forwall deposition by inducing the hairs to form a curl, in whichthe dividing bacteria become entrapped. In most species, Nodfactor alone (a lipochito-oligosaccharide excreted by bacteria)induces root hair deformation, though without curling, thusmost aspects of the initial effects of Nod factor can be elucidatedby studying root hair deformation. In this review we discussthe cellular events that host-specific Nod factors induce intheir host legume root hairs. The first event, detectable onlya few seconds after Nod factor application, is a Ca2+influxat the root hair tip, followed by a transient depolarizationof the plasma membrane potential, causing an increase in cytosolic[Ca2+] at the root hair tip. Also within minutes, Nod factorschange the cell organization by acting on the actin cytoskeleton,enhancing tip cell wall deposition so that root hairs becomelonger than normal for their species. Since the remodellingof the actin cytoskeleton precedes the second calcium event,Ca2+spiking, which is observed in the perinuclear area, we proposethat the initial cytoskeleton events taking place at the hairtip are related to Ca2+influx in the hair tip and that Ca2+spikingserves later events involving gene expression. Copyright 2001Annals of Botany Company Review, Nod factor, tip growth, root hair, Rhizobium, legume, cytoskeleton, calcium, symbiosis  相似文献   

15.
Nuclear dynamics in root hairs, which depends upon the actin cytoskeleton, appears to be an important factor in root-hair tip growth. Previous evidence suggests that there is an absolute requirement for the nucleus to be a fixed distance from the growing root-hair tip for tip growth to proceed. To test this hypothesis, nuclear dynamics were examined in root-hair cells bearing multiple root hairs. The majority of root-hair cells of transgenic plants overexpressing the ROP2 GTPase (ROP2 OX) bear multiple root hairs. Simultaneous and sustained fast tip growth occurred in multiple root hairs of ROP2 OX, with the continual presence of tip-localized cytoplasm in these growing hairs. Nuclear dynamics were imaged in ROP2 OX by co-expressing a transgene encoding a nuclear localization signal (NLS)-green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion protein. The nucleus was in continual proximity to one of the growing root-hair tips, whilst the other tip elongated at a similar rate but in the absence of the nucleus from the shank of that root hair. To test whether this phenomenon was an artefact of ROP2 overexpression, nuclear dynamics were examined in wild-type and NLS-GFP transgenic plants. Multiple root hairs on the same cell underwent simultaneous and sustained fast tip growth, with the nucleus lying deep within the shank of only one of these hairs. The nucleus was also moved into the root-hair tip during the severe root-hair tip branching which is characteristic of ROP2 OX transgenic plants. These results suggest that fast tip growth can proceed in some multiple root hairs at extreme distances from the nucleus.  相似文献   

16.
The normal tip-growing pattern exhibited by root hairs of legumes is disrupted when the hair is exposed to Nod factors generated by compatible bacteria capable of inducing nodule formation. Since microtubules (MTs) play an important role in regulating directionality and stability of apical growth in root hairs [T.N. Bibikova et al. (1999) Plant J 17:657–665], we examined the possibility that Nod factors might affect the MT distribution patterns in root hairs of Medicago sativa L. We observed that Nod factor application caused rapid changes in the pattern of MTs starting as early as 3 min after perfusion. Within 3 to 10 min after Nod factor application, first endoplasmic and then cortical MTs depolymerised, initially at the proximal ends of cells. Twenty minutes after exposure to Nod factors, a transverse band of microtubules was seen behind the tip, while almost all other MTs had depolymerised. By 30 min, very few MTs remained in the root hair and yet by 1 h the MT cytoskeleton re-formed. When Nod factors were applied in the presence of 10 M oryzalin or 5 M taxol, the MTs appeared disintegrated while the morphological effects, such as bulging and branching, became enhanced. Compared to the treatments with oryzalin or taxol alone, the combinatory treatments exhibited higher growth rates. Since microtubule reorganization is one of the earliest measurable events following Nod factor application we conclude that microtubules have an important role in the early phases of the signalling cascade. Microtubule involvement could be direct or a consequence of Nod factor-induced changes in ion levels.Electronic Supplementary Material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00425-003-1097-1Abbreviations BNM buffered nodulation medium - CLSM confocal laser scanning microscopy - MT microtubule  相似文献   

17.
18.
19.
Rhizobium-secreted nodulation factors are lipochitooligosaccharides that trigger the initiation of nodule formation on host legume roots. The first visible effect is root hair deformation, but the perception and signalling mechanisms that lead to this response are still unclear. When we treated Vicia sativa seedlings with mastoparan root hairs deformed, suggesting that G proteins are involved. To investigate whether mastoparan and Nod factor activate lipid signalling pathways initiated by phospholipase C (PLC) and D (PLD), seedlings were radiolabelled with [(32)P]orthophosphate prior to treatment. Mastoparan stimulated increases in phosphatidic acid (PA) and diacylglycerol pyrophosphate, indicative of PLD or PLC activity in combination with diacylglycerol kinase (DGK) and PA kinase. Treatment with Nod factor had similar effects, although less pronounced. The inactive mastoparan analogue Mas17 had no effect. The increase in PA was partially caused by the activation of PLD that was monitored by its in vivo transphosphatidylation activity. The application of primary butyl alcohols, inhibitors of PLD activity, blocked root hair deformation. Using different labelling strategies, evidence was provided for the activation of DGK. Since the PLC antagonist neomycin inhibited root hair deformation and the formation of PA, we propose that PLC activation produced diacylglycerol (DAG), which was subsequently converted to PA by DGK. The roles of PLC and PLD in Nod factor signalling are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
Rhizobium-made Nod factors induce rapid changes in both Ca(2+) and gene expression. Mutations and inhibitors that abolish Nod-factor-induced Ca(2+) spiking block gene induction, indicating a specific role for Ca(2+) spiking in signal transduction. We used transgenic Medicago truncatula expressing a "cameleon" Ca(2+) sensor to assess the relationship between Nod-factor-induced Ca(2+) spiking and the activation of downstream gene expression. In contrast to ENOD11 induction, Ca(2+) spiking is activated in all root-hair cells and in epidermal or pre-emergent root hairs cells in the root tip region. Furthermore, cortical cells immediately below the epidermal layer also show slow Ca(2+) spiking and these cells lack Nod-factor-induced ENOD11 expression. This indicates a specialization in nodulation gene induction downstream of Nod-factor perception and signal transduction. There was a gradient in the frequency of Ca(2+) spiking along the root, with younger root-hair cells having a longer period between spikes than older root hairs. Using a Ca(2+)-pump inhibitor to block Ca(2+) spiking at various times after addition of Nod factor, we conclude that about 36 consecutive Ca(2+) spikes are sufficient to induce ENOD11-GUS expression in root hairs. To determine if the length of time of Ca(2+) spiking or the number of Ca(2+) spikes is more critical for Nod-factor-induced ENOD11 expression, jasmonic acid (JA) was added to reduce the rate of Nod-factor-induced Ca(2+) spiking. This revealed that even when the period between Ca(2+) spikes was extended, an equivalent number of Ca(2+) spikes were required for the induction of ENOD11. However, this JA treatment did not affect the spatial patterning of ENOD11-GUS expression suggesting that although a minimal number of Ca(2+) spikes are required for Nod-factor-induced gene expression, other factors restrict the expression of ENOD11 to a subset of responding cells.  相似文献   

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