2021
DOI: 10.1101/2021.08.26.457880
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A promiscuity locus confers Lotus burttii nodulation with rhizobia from five different genera

Abstract: Legumes acquire access to atmospheric nitrogen through nitrogen fixation by rhizobia in root nodules. Rhizobia are soil dwelling organisms and there is a tremendous diversity of rhizobial species in different habitats. From the legume perspective, host range is a compromise between the ability to colonize new habitats, where the preferred symbiotic partner may be absent, and guarding against infection by suboptimal nitrogen fixers. Here, we investigate natural variation in rhizobial host range across Lotus spe… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Similarly to S. rostrata , under flooded conditions the robinoid Lotus uliginosus is intercellularly colonized by M. loti , culminating in the formation of nitrogen-fixing nodules ( James and Sprent, 1999 ). Another Lotus species, L. burttii , is an interesting model for studying rhizobial infection, since it can be nodulated by a large diversity of rhizobial species ( Zarrabian et al, 2021 ). The evidence collected indicates that some of these associations occur intercellularly; for instance, the interactions with Sinorhizobium fredii HH103 ( Acosta-Jurado et al, 2016 ) and Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar Norway ( Liang et al, 2019 ), the latter leading to ineffective nodules.…”
Section: Conditional Intercellular Infectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly to S. rostrata , under flooded conditions the robinoid Lotus uliginosus is intercellularly colonized by M. loti , culminating in the formation of nitrogen-fixing nodules ( James and Sprent, 1999 ). Another Lotus species, L. burttii , is an interesting model for studying rhizobial infection, since it can be nodulated by a large diversity of rhizobial species ( Zarrabian et al, 2021 ). The evidence collected indicates that some of these associations occur intercellularly; for instance, the interactions with Sinorhizobium fredii HH103 ( Acosta-Jurado et al, 2016 ) and Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar Norway ( Liang et al, 2019 ), the latter leading to ineffective nodules.…”
Section: Conditional Intercellular Infectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Liang et al (2019) described that ineffective R. leguminosarum Norway colonises nodules of L. burttii via cracks in the epidermis. Lotus burttii is more susceptible to less-specific infections (Zarrabian et al, 2021), which is likely to increase its vulnerability to forming an ineffective symbiosis. This reduced specificity by L. burttii is also highlighted in the number of starved plants that contained nodules.…”
Section: Starved L Burttii Plant Nodules Harbour a Microbiome Differe...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, Rhizobial extracellular polysaccharides of various structures, are important factors of nodulation efficiency (Marczak et al, 2017;Maillet et al, 2020). In Lotus a promiscuity locus permitting nodulation of L. burttii with rhizobia from 5 different genera has been located near the LYK cluster but is not due to NFR1 (Zarrabian et al, 2021).…”
Section: The Specificity Of Nodulation Directed By Lyk2bismentioning
confidence: 99%