Nuclear calcium changes at the core of symbiosis signalling

被引:177
作者
Oldroyd, Giles E. D.
Downie, J. Allan
机构
[1] John Innes Ctr Plant Sci Res, Dept Dis & Stress Biol, Norwich NR4 7UH, Norfolk, England
[2] John Innes Ctr Plant Sci Res, Dept Mol Microbiol, Norwich NR4 7UH, Norfolk, England
基金
英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
D O I
10.1016/j.pbi.2006.05.003
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Many plants acquire a significant proportion of their nutrient requirements through mutualistic symbiotic interactions with micro-organisms. Legumes in particular acquire the macronutrients nitrogen and phosphorus, and most likely an array of micro-nutrients, from interactions with nitrogen-fixing bacteria and with mycorrhizal fungi. Although the structures formed to support these interactions are different (nodules compared with arbuscules), there is conservation in early signalling between these two symbioses. It is likely that different receptors for rhizobial or mycorrhizal signals induce responses that feed into a common signalling pathway. In the nodulation signalling pathway, calcium plays an essential role as a secondary messenger, and the component that probably transduces the calcium signal is a unique calcium-activated kinase that is required for both mycorrhization and nodulation. The nodulation signalling pathway contains transcriptional regulators downstream of the calcium-activated kinase that are not required for the mycorrhizal symbiosis. This suggests that different symbiosis-specific signalling pathways are activated downstream of the calcium-activated kinase, and raises the question of how specificity of gene induction can be achieved in two pathways that are both likely to use calcium and a unique calcium-activated kinase to induce different downstream events.
引用
收藏
页码:351 / 357
页数:7
相关论文
共 46 条
[1]   Plant sesquiterpenes induce hyphal branching in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi [J].
Akiyama, K ;
Matsuzaki, K ;
Hayashi, H .
NATURE, 2005, 435 (7043) :824-827
[2]   A defined range of guard cell calcium oscillation parameters encodes stomatal movements [J].
Allen, GJ ;
Chu, SP ;
Harrington, CL ;
Schumacher, K ;
Hoffman, T ;
Tang, YY ;
Grill, E ;
Schroeder, JI .
NATURE, 2001, 411 (6841) :1053-1057
[3]   Medicago truncatula DMI1 required for bacterial and fungal symbioses in legumes [J].
Ane, JM ;
Kiss, GB ;
Riely, BK ;
Penmetsa, RV ;
Oldroyd, GED ;
Ayax, C ;
Lévy, J ;
Debellé, F ;
Baek, JM ;
Kalo, P ;
Rosenberg, C ;
Roe, BA ;
Long, SR ;
Dénarié, J ;
Cook, DR .
SCIENCE, 2004, 303 (5662) :1364-1367
[4]   A mutant in Lycopersicon esculentum Mill. with highly reduced VA mycorrhizal colonization:: isolation and preliminary characterisation [J].
Barker, SJ ;
Stummer, B ;
Gao, L ;
Dispain, I ;
O'Connor, PJ ;
Smith, SE .
PLANT JOURNAL, 1998, 15 (06) :791-797
[5]   The NFP locus of Medicago truncatula controls an early step of Nod factor signal transduction upstream of a rapid calcium flux and root hair deformation [J].
Ben Amor, B ;
Shaw, SL ;
Oldroyd, GED ;
Maillet, F ;
Penmetsa, RV ;
Cook, D ;
Long, SR ;
Dénarié, J ;
Gough, C .
PLANT JOURNAL, 2003, 34 (04) :495-506
[6]   Rhizobium Nod factors induce increases in intracellular free calcium and extracellular calcium influxes in bean root hairs [J].
Cárdenas, L ;
Feijó, JA ;
Kunkel, JG ;
Sánchez, F ;
Holdaway-Clarke, T ;
Hepler, PK ;
Quinto, C .
PLANT JOURNAL, 1999, 19 (03) :347-352
[7]   Four genes of Medicago truncatula controlling components of a nod factor transduction pathway [J].
Catoira, R ;
Galera, C ;
de Billy, F ;
Penmetsa, RV ;
Journet, EP ;
Maillet, F ;
Rosenberg, C ;
Cook, D ;
Gough, C ;
Dénarié, J .
PLANT CELL, 2000, 12 (09) :1647-1665
[8]   Pharmacological evidence that multiple phospholipid signaling pathways link rhizobium nodulation factor perception in Medicago truncatula root hairs to intracellular responses, including Ca2+ spiking and specific ENOD gene expression [J].
Charron, D ;
Pingret, JL ;
Chabaud, M ;
Journet, EP ;
Barker, DG .
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY, 2004, 136 (03) :3582-3593
[9]   The inositol trisphosphate receptor regulates a 50-second behavioral rhythm in C-elegans [J].
Dal Santo, P ;
Logan, MA ;
Chisholm, AD ;
Jorgensen, EM .
CELL, 1999, 98 (06) :757-767
[10]   Isolation of a premycorrhizal infection (pmi2) mutant of tomato, resistant to arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal colonization [J].
David-Schwartz, R ;
Gadkar, V ;
Wininger, S ;
Bendov, R ;
Galili, G ;
Levy, AA ;
Kapulnik, Y .
MOLECULAR PLANT-MICROBE INTERACTIONS, 2003, 16 (05) :382-388