Lotus japonicus ARPC1 is required for rhizobial infection

Citation

Hossain, M.S., Liao, J., James, E.K., Sato, S., Tabata, S., Jurkiewicz, A., Madsen, L.H., Stougaard, J., Ross, L., Szczyglowski, K. (2012). Lotus japonicus ARPC1 is required for rhizobial infection. Plant Physiology, [online] 160(2), 917-928. http://dx.doi.org/10.1104/pp.112.202572

Abstract

Remodeling of the plant cell cytoskeleton precedes symbiotic entry of nitrogen-fixing bacteria within the host plant roots. Here we identify a Lotus japonicus gene encoding a predicted ACTIN-RELATED PROTEIN COMPONENT1 (ARPC1) as essential for rhizobial infection but not for arbuscular mycorrhiza symbiosis. In other organisms ARPC1 constitutes a subunit of the ARP2/3 complex, the major nucleator of Y-branched actin filaments. The L. japonicus arpc1 mutant showed a distorted trichome phenotype and was defective in epidermal infection thread formation, producing mostly empty nodules. A few partially colonized nodules that did form in arpc1 contained abnormal infections. Together with previously described L. japonicus Nckassociated protein1 and 121F-specific p53 inducible RNA mutants, which are also impaired in the accommodation of rhizobia, our data indicate that ARPC1 and, by inference a suppressor of cAMP receptor/WASP-family verpolin homologous protein-ARP2/3 pathway, must have been coopted during evolution of nitrogen-fixing symbiosis to specifically mediate bacterial entry. © 2012 American Society of Plant Biologists. All Rights Reserved.

Publication date

2012-01-01