Parallel loss of symbiosis genes in relatives of nitrogen-fixing non-legume Parasponia

Author:

van Velzen Robin,Holmer Rens,Bu Fengjiao,Rutten Luuk,van Zeijl Arjan,Liu Wei,Santuari Luca,Cao Qingqin,Sharma Trupti,Shen Defeng,Roswanjaya Yuda P.,Wardhani Titis A.K.,Kalhor Maryam Seifi,Jansen Joëlle,van den Hoogen D. Johan,Güngör Berivan,Hartog Marijke,Hontelez Jan,Verver Jan,Yang Wei-Cai,Schijlen Elio,Repin Rimi,Schilthuizen Menno,Schranz M. Eric,Heidstra Renze,Miyata Kana,Fedorova Elena,Kohlen Wouter,Bisseling Ton,Smit Sandra,Geurts ReneORCID

Abstract

AbstractRhizobium nitrogen-fixing nodules are a well-known trait of legumes, but nodules also occur in other plant lineages either with rhizobium or the actinomycete Frankia as microsymbiont. The widely accepted hypothesis is that nodulation evolved independently multiple times, with only a few losses. However, insight in the evolutionary trajectory of nodulation is lacking. We conducted comparative studies using Parasponia (Cannabaceae), the only non-legume able to establish nitrogen fixing nodules with rhizobium. This revealed that Parasponia and legumes utilize a large set of orthologous symbiosis genes. Comparing genomes of Parasponia and its non-nodulating relative Trema did not reveal specific gene duplications that could explain a recent gain of nodulation in Parasponia. Rather, Trema and other non-nodulating species in the Order Rosales show evidence of pseudogenization or loss of key symbiosis genes. This demonstrates that these species have lost the potential to nodulate. This finding challenges a long-standing hypothesis on evolution of nitrogen-fixing symbioses, and has profound implications for translational approaches aimed at engineering nitrogen-fixing nodules in crop plants.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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