Light-induced mobile factors from shoots regulate rhizobium-triggered soybean root nodulation
Tao Wang, Jing Guo, Yaqi Peng, Xiangguang Lyu, Bin Liu, Shiyong Sun, Xuelu Wang
Abstract
Nitrogen fixation in legume roots Soybeans and other legumes form symbiotic relationships with nitrogen-fixing bacteria in root nodules, thus ensuring the plant a ready supply of the necessary nutrient. Wang et al . worked out the signaling pathways that integrate above-ground light with below-ground root nodulation. Two mobile regulators move from shoot to root in response to light and, together, they form a signaling module in the root that induces the expression of nodulation factors. Thus, when the shoot sees enough light to support photosynthetic productivity, the root gets the signal to ramp up nitrogen fixation. —PJH
Topics & Concepts
RhizobiumBiologyCell biologyShootNitrogen fixationSymbiosisTranscription factorBotanyStrigolactoneGeneArabidopsisBiochemistryBacteriaGeneticsMutantLegume Nitrogen Fixing SymbiosisPlant nutrient uptake and metabolismSoybean genetics and cultivation