Rhizobium symbiotic efficiency meets CEP signaling peptides.
Carole LaffontFlorian FrugierPublished in: The New phytologist (2023)
C-terminally encoded peptides (CEP) signaling peptides are drivers of systemic pathways regulating nitrogen (N) acquisition in different plants, from Arabidopsis to legumes, depending on mineral N availability (e.g. nitrate) and on the whole plant N demand. Recent studies in the Medicago truncatula model legume revealed how root-produced CEP peptides control the root competence for endosymbiosis with N fixing rhizobia soil bacteria through the activity of the Compact Root Architecture 2 (CRA2) CEP receptor in shoots. Among CEP genes, MtCEP7 was shown to be tightly linked to nodulation, and the dynamic temporal regulation of its expression reflects the plant ability to maintain a different symbiotic root competence window depending on the symbiotic efficiency of the rhizobium strain, as well as to reinitiate a new window of root competence for nodulation.