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DOI: 10.1104/pp.113.215111
¤ OpenAccess: Hybrid
This work has “Hybrid” OA status. This means it is free under an open license in a toll-access journal.

Rhizobial Infection Is Associated with the Development of Peripheral Vasculature in Nodules of<i>Medicago truncatula</i>

Dian Guan,Nicola Stacey,Cheng‐Wu Liu,Jiangqi Wen,Kirankumar S. Mysore,Ivone Torres‐Jerez,Tatiana Vernié,Million Tadege,Chuanen Zhou,Zeng‐Yu Wang,Michael K. Udvardi,Giles Oldroyd,Jeremy D. Murray

Medicago truncatula
Rhizobia
Biology
2013
Nodulation in legumes involves the coordination of epidermal infection by rhizobia with cell divisions in the underlying cortex. During nodulation, rhizobia are entrapped within curled root hairs to form an infection pocket. Transcellular tubes called infection threads then develop from the pocket and become colonized by rhizobia. The infection thread grows toward the developing nodule primordia and rhizobia are taken up into the nodule cells, where they eventually fix nitrogen. The epidermal and cortical developmental programs are synchronized by a yet-to-be-identified signal that is transmitted from the outer to the inner cell layers of the root. Using a new allele of the Medicago truncatula mutant Lumpy Infections, lin-4, which forms normal infection pockets but cannot initiate infection threads, we show that infection thread initiation is required for normal nodule development. lin-4 forms nodules with centrally located vascular bundles similar to that found in lateral roots rather than the peripheral vasculature characteristic of legume nodules. The same phenomenon was observed in M. truncatula plants inoculated with the Sinorhizobium meliloti exoY mutant, and the M. truncatula vapyrin-2 mutant, all cases where infections arrest. Nodules on lin-4 have reduced expression of the nodule meristem marker MtCRE1 and do not express root-tip markers. In addition, these mutant nodules have altered patterns of gene expression for the cytokinin and auxin markers CRE1 and DR5. Our work highlights the coordinating role that bacterial infection exerts on the developing nodule and allows us to draw comparisons with primitive actinorhizal nodules and rhizobia-induced nodules on the nonlegume Parasponia andersonii.
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    Rhizobial Infection Is Associated with the Development of Peripheral Vasculature in Nodules of<i>Medicago truncatula</i> ” is a paper by Dian Guan Nicola Stacey Cheng‐Wu Liu Jiangqi Wen Kirankumar S. Mysore Ivone Torres‐Jerez Tatiana Vernié Million Tadege Chuanen Zhou Zeng‐Yu Wang Michael K. Udvardi Giles Oldroyd Jeremy D. Murray published in 2013. It has an Open Access status of “hybrid”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.