PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Growth conditions determine the DNF2 requirement for symbiosis.

  • Fathi Berrabah,
  • Marie Bourcy,
  • Anne Cayrel,
  • Alexis Eschstruth,
  • Samuel Mondy,
  • Pascal Ratet,
  • Benjamin Gourion

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0091866
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 3
p. e91866

Abstract

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Rhizobia and legumes are able to interact in a symbiotic way leading to the development of root nodules. Within nodules, rhizobia fix nitrogen for the benefit of the plant. These interactions are efficient because spectacularly high densities of nitrogen fixing rhizobia are maintained in the plant cells. DNF2, a Medicago truncatula gene has been described as required for nitrogen fixation, bacteroid's persistence and to prevent defense-like reactions in the nodules. This manuscript shows that a Rhizobium mutant unable to differentiate is not sufficient to trigger defense-like reactions in this organ. Furthermore, we show that the requirement of DNF2 for effective symbiosis can be overcome by permissive growth conditions. The dnf2 knockout mutants grown in vitro on agarose or Phytagel as gelling agents are able to produce nodules fixing nitrogen with the same efficiency as the wild-type. However, when agarose medium is supplemented with the plant defense elicitor ulvan, the dnf2 mutant recovers the fix- phenotype. Together, our data show that plant growth conditions impact the gene requirement for symbiotic nitrogen fixation and suggest that they influence the symbiotic suppression of defense reactions in nodules.