Access
To read this story in full you will need to login or make a payment (see right).
Letters to Nature
Nature 417, 962-966 (27 June 2002) | doi:10.1038/nature00842; Received 6 February 2002; Accepted 23 April 2002
Open Innovation Challenges
-
Novel Approaches to Protecting Maize from Insect Damage
The Seeker is looking for novel approaches to protecting maize from insect damage. This Challenge re...
-
Single-cell Analysis Platform
This Challenge is looking for novel approaches to analyzing changes at a single-cell level. This is...
nature jobs
Full-Professor of Heart and Thoracic Surgery (W3) (f / m)
- Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena
- Jena Germany
Group Leader Positions
- IMP
- Vienna Austria
A receptor kinase gene regulating symbiotic nodule development
Gabriella Endre, Attila Kereszt, Zoltán Kevei, Sorina Mihacea, Péter Kaló & György B. Kiss
- Institute of Genetics, Biological Research Center of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, H-6701 Szeged, PO Box 521, Hungary
Correspondence to: György B. Kiss Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to G.B.K. (e-mail: Email: kgb@nucleus.szbk.u-szeged.hu or/and e-mail: Email: gbkiss@ucdavis.edu). Accession numbers in the EMBL/GenBank/DDBJ databases for supporting data sets are as follows: AJ418368; AJ418377; AJ418369; AJ418370; AJ418371; AJ418372; AJ418373; AJ418374; AJ418375; AJ418376; AJ418367; AJ428990; AJ428991.
Abstract
Leguminous plants are able to establish a nitrogen-fixing symbiosis with soil bacteria generally known as rhizobia. Metabolites exuded by the plant root activate the production of a rhizobial signal molecule, the Nod factor, which is essential for symbiotic nodule development1, 2. This lipo-chitooligosaccharide signal is active at femtomolar concentrations, and its structure is correlated with host specificity of symbiosis3, suggesting the involvement of a cognate perception system in the plant host. Here we describe the cloning of a gene from Medicago sativa that is essential for Nod-factor perception in alfalfa, and by genetic analogy, in the related legumes Medicago truncatula and Pisum sativum. The identified 'nodulation receptor kinase', NORK, is predicted to function in the Nod-factor perception/transduction system (the NORK system) that initiates a signal cascade leading to nodulation. The family of 'NORK extracellular-sequence-like' (NSL) genes is broadly distributed in the plant kingdom, although their biological function has not been previously ascribed. We suggest that during the evolution of symbiosis an ancestral NSL system was co-opted for transduction of an external ligand, the rhizobial Nod factor, leading to development of the symbiotic root nodule.
- Institute of Genetics, Biological Research Center of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, H-6701 Szeged, PO Box 521, Hungary
Correspondence to: György B. Kiss Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to G.B.K. (e-mail: Email: kgb@nucleus.szbk.u-szeged.hu or/and e-mail: Email: gbkiss@ucdavis.edu). Accession numbers in the EMBL/GenBank/DDBJ databases for supporting data sets are as follows: AJ418368; AJ418377; AJ418369; AJ418370; AJ418371; AJ418372; AJ418373; AJ418374; AJ418375; AJ418376; AJ418367; AJ428990; AJ428991.
To read this story in full you will need to login or make a payment (see right).

