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Rhizobial motility preference in root colonization of Medicago truncatula
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Summary
Tunnel-like infection thread (IT) structures support root colonization by symbiotic nitrogen-fixing rhizobia bacteria in most legume species. These tip-grown structures are key to direct rhizobia from root hairs to developing nodules, where they are hosted to fix nitrogen. Rhizobia likely progress inside ITs by combining growth and motility, by modes not yet defined. Here, we tackled this question by combining mathematical modeling, live cell imaging, and bacterial mutant phenotyping in
Medicago truncatula
.
Modeling the motion of fluorescently-labeled
Sinorhizobium meliloti
inside early root hair IT compartments estimated slow movement (2 to 6 µm/h), compatible with passive rather than active motility. Consistent with this model, flagella-less
fliF
and
fliF-fliRdel S. meliloti
mutants were impaired in active swimming motility
in vitro,
yet could colonize host roots and nodules
in planta
. In contrast, mutation in the rhizobactin 1021 siderophore
rhbE
biosynthesis gene affected both surface motility
in vitro,
and host root and nodule colonisation. This mutation also promoted the formation of branched ITs in root hairs, which ultimately resulted in impaired nodule development and infection.
Our findings support the model estimation and suggest that
S. meliloti
prioritises flagella-independent surface translocation, partially by secreting rhizobactin 1021 surfactants to reach developing nodules in
M. truncatula
.
Title: Rhizobial motility preference in root colonization of
Medicago truncatula
Description:
Summary
Tunnel-like infection thread (IT) structures support root colonization by symbiotic nitrogen-fixing rhizobia bacteria in most legume species.
These tip-grown structures are key to direct rhizobia from root hairs to developing nodules, where they are hosted to fix nitrogen.
Rhizobia likely progress inside ITs by combining growth and motility, by modes not yet defined.
Here, we tackled this question by combining mathematical modeling, live cell imaging, and bacterial mutant phenotyping in
Medicago truncatula
.
Modeling the motion of fluorescently-labeled
Sinorhizobium meliloti
inside early root hair IT compartments estimated slow movement (2 to 6 µm/h), compatible with passive rather than active motility.
Consistent with this model, flagella-less
fliF
and
fliF-fliRdel S.
meliloti
mutants were impaired in active swimming motility
in vitro,
yet could colonize host roots and nodules
in planta
.
In contrast, mutation in the rhizobactin 1021 siderophore
rhbE
biosynthesis gene affected both surface motility
in vitro,
and host root and nodule colonisation.
This mutation also promoted the formation of branched ITs in root hairs, which ultimately resulted in impaired nodule development and infection.
Our findings support the model estimation and suggest that
S.
meliloti
prioritises flagella-independent surface translocation, partially by secreting rhizobactin 1021 surfactants to reach developing nodules in
M.
truncatula
.
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