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First published online August 19, 2005; 10.1104/pp.105.064931 Plant Physiology 139:224-230 (2005) © 2005 American Society of Plant Biologists Nitrogen Deprivation Stimulates Symbiotic Gland Development in Gunnera manicata1Department of Biology (W.-L.C., G.A.P., P.C.S., S.C., J.E.) and Center for the Study of Biological Complexity (J.E.), Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, 23284; and Department of Botany, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland (G.L., B.O.)
Gunnera is the only genus of angiosperms known to host cyanobacteria and the only group of land plants that hosts cyanobacteria intracellularly. Motile filaments of cyanobacteria, known as hormogonia, colonize Gunnera plants through cells in the plant's specialized stem glands. It is commonly held that Gunnera plants always possess functional glands for symbiosis. We found, however, that stem gland development did not occur when Gunnera manicata plants were grown on nitrogen (N)-replete medium but, rather, was initiated at predetermined positions when plants were deprived of combined N. While N status was the main determinant for gland development, an exogenous carbon source (sucrose) accelerated the process. Furthermore, a high level of sucrose stimulated the formation of callus-like tissue in place of the gland under N-replete conditions. Treatment of plants with the auxin transport inhibitor 1-naphthylphthalamic acid prevented gland development on N-limited medium, most likely by preventing resource reallocation from leaves to the stem. Optimized conditions were found for in vitro establishment of the Nostoc-Gunnera symbiosis by inoculating mature glands with hormogonia from Nostoc punctiforme, a cyanobacterium strain for which the full genome sequence is available. In contrast to uninoculated plants, G. manicata plants colonized by N. punctiforme were able to continue their growth on N-limited medium. Understanding the nature of the Gunnera plant's unusual adaptation to an N-limited environment may shed light on the evolution of plant-cyanobacterium symbioses and may suggest a route to establish productive associations between N-fixing cyanobacteria and crop plants.
1 This work was supported in part by the National Science Foundation (grant no. EF0307208 to J.E.). P.C.S. is a recipient of the American Society of Plant Biologists Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship. Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.105.064931. * Corresponding author; e-mail wchiu{at}vcu.edu; fax 8048280503. Received April 30, 2005; returned for revision June 30, 2005; accepted July 11, 2005. Related articles in Plant Physiol.:
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