Publication | Open Access
<i>TOO MUCH LOVE</i>, a Root Regulator Associated with the Long-Distance Control of Nodulation in <i>Lotus japonicus</i>
129
Citations
32
References
2009
Year
BotanyRoot Regulator AssociatedGeneticsMolecular GeneticsReciprocal GraftingLotus JaponicusLong-distance ControlPlant DevelopmentPlant Molecular BiologyPlant BiologyLegume PlantsGene ExpressionPlant HormoneBiologyDevelopmental BiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyRoot MorphologySymbiosisMedicinePlant Physiology
Legume plants tightly control the development and number of symbiotic root nodules. In Lotus japonicus, this regulation requires HAR1 (a CLAVATA1-like receptor kinase) in the shoots, suggesting that a long-distance communication between the shoots and the roots may exist. To better understand its molecular basis, we isolated and characterized a novel hypernodulating mutant of L. japonicus named too much love (tml). Compared with the wild type, tml mutants produced much more nodules which densely covered a wider range of the roots. Reciprocal grafting showed that tml hypernodulation is determined by the root genotype. Moreover, grafting a har1 shoot onto a tml rootstock did not exhibit any obvious additive effects on the nodule number, which was further supported by double mutational analysis. These observations indicate that a shoot factor HAR1 and a root factor TML participate in the same genetic pathway which governs the long-distance signaling of nodule number control. We also showed that the inhibitory effect of TML on nodulation is likely to be local. Therefore, TML may function downstream of HAR1 and the gene product TML might serve as a receptor or mediator of unknown mobile signal molecules that are transported from the shoots to the roots.
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