Friend or Foe - Even the Plant Doesn’t Know
Two soil-dwelling strangers - a friend and a foe - approach a plant and
communicate with it in order to enter a partnership. The friend wants to trade
nitrogen for food. The foe is a parasite that wants to burrow in and harm the
plant. In a new finding published in Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, researchers at NC State have found that the two strangers
communicate with the plant in very similar ways. The plant’s responses to both
friend and foe are also remarkably similar.

Using high-tech microscopy and flourescent imaging techniques that allow for
real-time, three-dimensional study in living cells over time, the NC State
researchers discovered that the model legume Lotus japonicus responded
similarly to signals from both rhizobia, the friends that fix nitrogen for the
plant, and root-knot nematodes, the parasitic foes that want to harm the plant.
Signals from both outsiders induce rapid changes in distribution of the plant’s
cytoskeleton, which is part of a pathway that leads to a series of growth
changes that include the formation of either nodules housing bacteria or giant
cells from which the nematodes feed. The scientists also discovered that, like
rhizobia and contrary to popular belief, the root-knot nematode signals plants
from a distance and therefore does not need to attach itself to the plant to
elicit a response. When the researchers studied L. japonicus plants
missing the receptors that receive signals from other organisms, they discovered
that the plants failed to respond to signals from either friend or foe, and
therefore no changes were viewed in the plant’s cytoskeleton. “This exquisite
system that plants have developed to allow beneficial interactions with other
organisms like rhizobia is being exploited by
nematodes,” says Dr. David Bird, associate professor of plant pathology,
co-director of NC State’s Center for the Biology of Nematode Parasitism and
co-author of the paper. “Nematodes have not only found a weak link in plants but
may be using the very same bacterial machinery against it.”
Researchers first observed the changes in the
plants triggered by signals from rhizobia, called Nod factors, and then saw
similar changes occurring when plants were signaled by root-knot nematodes. In
the paper, the researchers call the nematodes’ signals “Nematode factors.” After
rhizobia perceive plant signals and send back Nod factors, the plant’s root
hairs curl around the bacteria. The rhizobia then migrate into the root and form
special structures called nodules, where they turn atmospheric nitrogen into
usable nitrogen for the plant and, in return, take some of the plant’s energy to
survive. A similar relationship appeared between plants and nematodes, even
though the nematode provides no benefit to its host. Root-knot nematodes form
feeding cells, termed giant cells, which later form gall tissue. “We don’’t know
the precise structure of Nematode factor, but it appears that the nematodes may
have actually acquired genes from rhizobia to exploit this signal pathway.” Bird
says. (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2/14/05).