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Engineered plant control of associative nitrogen fixation.

Timothy Lyndon HaskettPonraj ParamasivanMarta D MendesPatrick GreenBarney A GeddesHayley E KnightsBeatriz JorrínMin-Hyung RyuPaul BrettChristopher A VoigtGiles E D OldroydPhilip Simon Poole
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
Engineering N2-fixing symbioses between cereals and diazotrophic bacteria represents a promising strategy to sustainably deliver biologically fixed nitrogen (N) in agriculture. We previously developed novel transkingdom signaling between plants and bacteria, through plant production of the bacterial signal rhizopine, allowing control of bacterial gene expression in association with the plant. Here, we have developed both a homozygous rhizopine producing (RhiP) barley line and a hybrid rhizopine uptake system that conveys upon our model bacterium Azorhizobium caulinodans ORS571 (Ac) 103-fold improved sensitivity for rhizopine perception. Using this improved genetic circuitry, we established tight rhizopine-dependent transcriptional control of the nitrogenase master regulator nifA and the N metabolism σ-factor rpoN, which drove nitrogenase expression and activity in vitro and in situ by bacteria colonizing RhiP barley roots. Although in situ nitrogenase activity was suboptimally effective relative to the wild-type strain, activation was specific to RhiP barley and was not observed on the roots of wild-type plants. This work represents a key milestone toward the development of a synthetic plant-controlled symbiosis in which the bacteria fix N2 only when in contact with the desired host plant and are prevented from interaction with nontarget plant species.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • gene expression
  • transcription factor
  • cell wall
  • dna methylation
  • climate change
  • minimally invasive
  • oxidative stress
  • heat shock
  • plant growth
  • arabidopsis thaliana