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The plant circadian clock gene LHY influences Medicago truncatula nodulation

Achom, M.; Roy, P.; Lagunas, B.; Bonyadi-Pour, R.; Pardal, A.; Baxter, L. A.; Richmond, B.; Aschauer, N.; Fletcher, E.; Picot, E.; Rowson, M.; Blackwell, J.; Rich-Griffin, C.; Mysore, K. S.; Wen, J.; Ott, S.; Carre, I. A.; Gifford, M. L.

2021-03-23 plant biology
10.1101/2021.03.22.435813 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Legumes house nitrogen-fixing endosymbiotic rhizobia in specialized polyploid cells within root nodules, which are factories of metabolic activity. We discovered that the circadian clock-associated transcriptional factor LATE ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL (LHY) affects nodulation in Medicago truncatula. By carrying out expression analysis of transcripts over time in nodules we found that the clock enables coordinated control of metabolic and regulatory processes linked to nitrogen fixation. Rhythmic transcripts in root nodules include a subset of Nodule-specific Cysteine Rich peptides (NCRs) that have the LHY-bound conserved Evening Element in their promoters. Until now, studies have suggested that NCRs act to regulate bacteroid differentiation and keep the rhizobial population in check. However, these conclusions came from the study of a few members of this very large gene family that has complex diversified spatio-temporal expression. We suggest that rhythmic expression of NCRs may be important for temporal coordination of bacterial activity with the rhythms of the plant host, in order to ensure optimal symbiosis. HighlightsO_LIThe circadian clock-associated transcriptional factor LATE ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL (LHY) impacts on successful Medicago truncatula-rhizobial symbiosis C_LIO_LIThe plant clock coordinates rhythmic patterns of metabolic and regulatory activity in nodules and drives rhythmic expression of a subset of Nodule-specific Cysteine Rich (NCR) genes. C_LIO_LIRhythmic expression of NCRs may be important for temporal coordination of bacterial activity with plant host rhythms to ensure optimal symbiosis. C_LI

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