Symbiotic host specificity between leguminous plants and rhizobia is determined by substituted and acylated glucosamine oligosaccharide signals.

P Lerouge
Author Information
  1. P Lerouge: Centre Régional de Spectroscopie, URA-CNRS 464, Université de Rouen, Mont Saint Aignan, France.

Abstract

Rhizobia are nitrogen-fixing bacteria which invade root hairs of leguminous plants and induce, in a specific manner, the formation of root nodules in which they fix nitrogen. The early steps of the symbiosis can be considered as a reciprocal molecular communication between the two partners. Initially, the plant excretes a gene inducer which stimulates the expression of bacterial nodulation genes. These nodulation genes are responsible for the synthesis of extracellular host-specific signals, called nodulation factors. The bacterial nodulation factors were isolated and structurally identified as substituted and N-acylated chitin oligosaccharides. These prokaryotic lipo-oligosaccharide signals play a key role in the symbiosis by controlling the host specificity of the bacteria. They constitute a new class of signalling molecules able to elicit nodule organogenesis in leguminous plants in the absence of bacteria.

MeSH Term

Carbohydrate Conformation
Carbohydrate Sequence
Fabaceae
Genes, Bacterial
Glucosamine
Molecular Sequence Data
Oligosaccharides
Plants, Medicinal
Rhizobiaceae
Signal Transduction
Species Specificity
Symbiosis

Chemicals

Oligosaccharides
Glucosamine

Word Cloud

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