Rapid Phosphoproteomic and Transcriptomic Changes in the Rhizobia-legume Symbiosis

TitleRapid Phosphoproteomic and Transcriptomic Changes in the Rhizobia-legume Symbiosis
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsRose, CM, Venkateshwaran, M, Volkening, JD, Grimsrud, PA, Maeda, J, Bailey, DJ, Park, K, Howes-Podoll, M, D. Os, den, Yeun, LH, Westphall, MS, Sussman, MR, Ane, JM, Coon, JJ
JournalMolecular & Cellular Proteomics
Volume11
Pagination724-744
Date PublishedSep
Type of ArticleArticle
ISBN Number1535-9476
Accession NumberWOS:000310209300015
Keywordsabscisic-acid, arbuscular mycorrhizal, calcium spiking, dependent protein-kinase, factor signal-transduction, gene-expression, lotus-japonicus roots, medicago-truncatula roots, nod factor, root hair-cells
Abstract

Symbiotic associations between legumes and rhizobia usually commence with the perception of bacterial lipochitooligosaccharides, known as Nod factors (NF), which triggers rapid cellular and molecular responses in host plants. We report here deep untargeted tandem mass spectrometry-based measurements of rapid NF-induced changes in the phosphorylation status of 13,506 phosphosites in 7739 proteins from the model legume Medicago truncatula. To place these phosphorylation changes within a biological context, quantitative phosphoproteomic and RNA measurements in wild-type plants were compared with those observed in mutants, one defective in NF perception (nfp) and one defective in downstream signal transduction events (dmi3). Our study quantified the early phosphorylation and transcription dynamics that are specifically associated with NF-signaling, confirmed a dmi3-mediated feedback loop in the pathway, and suggested "cryptic" NF-signaling pathways, some of them being also involved in the response to symbiotic arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. Molecular & Cellular Proteomics 11: 10.1074/mcp.M112.019208, 724-744, 2012.