An N-fix in time: circadian control of nodulation

Lead Research Organisation: University of Warwick
Department Name: School of Life Sciences

Abstract

Growth and development of plants, animals and microbes are under the control of a 24-hour biological clock known as the circadian clock, which enables them to coordinate their activities with diurnal changes in environmental conditions. The circadian clock sets in train how many important molecules are made, used and moved around cells and organisms at any time. When plants and microbes work together in symbiosis the timing of this movement of molecules between organisms is of key importance, because receiving them at the wrong time means that these important resources will not be utilised efficiently. As the world's population continues to grow we will need to produce 60% more food by 2050. Crop yields must increase without increasing expensive and environmentally costly fertiliser application to supply depleted soils with nutrients such as nitrogen and therefore research to understand how resource use can be maximized in plants is crucial.

One example is the symbiosis between legumes (peas, beans and lentils for example) and rhizobium, a nitrogen-fixing bacterium. Rhizobium fixes nitrogen from the atmosphere and passes it on to its plant host in the form of nitrate, thus reducing the need for nitrogen fertiliser. Since most soils are nitrogen-poor and the production of nitrogen fertiliser is incredibly energy- and environmentally-expensive, this symbiosis is crucial in agriculture. Legumes are also an important source of dietary protein for both humans and animals. Any way that we can enhance or improve the impact of nodulation would help to make legumes an even more useful crop to help us achieve sustainable ways of producing food.

We have discovered that part of the plant circadian clock called CCA1 affects the setting up of this symbiosis. In this project we will identify the specific stages of symbiosis that are affected by the clock. We will test whether the effects of CCA1 are linked to its function in the timing mechanism of the clock, and the role of molecules that might be affected by this. We will also test the role of CCA1 and of plant circadian rhythms in compatibility between the rhizobia symbiont and plant host. Together this research will enable us to design biotechnological treatments to improve nodulation in the future by working with the biological clock of the plant.

Technical Summary

By determining how the plant circadian clock gene CCA1 affects nodulation in Medicago truncatula this work will identify novel avenues to improve nodulation and crop yield. Our data suggests the CCA1 effect could be mediated by regulation of a subset of the 700+ large family of Nodule-specific Cysteine Rich (NCR) small peptides. Aside from their known defensin-like role in controlling rhizobial population activity, our recent data shows that the expression of many NCRs are rhythmically expressed, regulated by differing levels of nitrogen, and affected by autoregulation of nodulation, consistent with additional functions in the regulation of development.

Our experiments to characterise the role of CCA1 in nodulation will use molecular biology, plant transcriptomics using RNAseq and proteomics to measure NCR peptide levels in nodules over timecourses in normal and non-24h light-dark cycles. Plant circadian rhythms in roots and nodules will be visualized using continual luciferase-imaging of a CCA1:luciferase line that we will construct. By studying the progression of nodulation in plants using microscopy alongside nodulation phenotypic and N-fixation activity assays we will be able to identify the stages of symbiosis establishment that are disrupted by cca1 mutation, and the associated mechanisms.

Our data will determine whether CCA1 is linked to its function in circadian timing and more specifically in the timing of NCR function. Modulating the timing of NCR expression or activation may provide avenues to control nodulation independently of other clock-promoted processes, to increase plant yield. It may also identify alternative targets for future manipulation, such as flavonoid signals that are involved in nodulation. This project will also test the role of CCA1 and of plant circadian rhythms in symbiont-host compatibility and will identify candidate mechanisms to inform the basis for rational selection of the most appropriate rhizobial inoculants in future.

Planned Impact

As the world's population continues to grow we will need to produce 60% more food by 2050. Crop yields must increase without increasing expensive and environmentally costly fertiliser application to supply depleted soils with nutrients such as nitrogen. Moreover, CO2 emissions from the Haber-Bosch process that is required to produce nitrogen fertilisers are a major contributor to greenhouse gases. Legumes are an important source of dietary protein and are key crops for sustainable agriculture because they fix atmospheric nitrogen via symbiotic interactions with nitrogen-fixing rhizobia bacteria. Our recent work has uncovered a novel link between the plant circadian clock and nodulation. The research in this project aims to use characterization of this link in order to find novel ways to modulate the control of nodulation and increase nitrogen fixation and plant yield. We will carry out a range of activities to engage with a number of groups of interested parties, with details as set out in our Pathways to Impact:

The agricultural sector including seeds, chemical production and farmers will benefit directly from the longer-term impacts of this research since we will determine if modulating the function of circadian rhythms in plant hosts could enhance crop yield. As modulation of the underlying oscillator may have negative side-effects we will focus on understanding the role of rhythmically expressed signaling peptides that are nodule-specific and could act as growth-enhancers when applied to plants. Alternative, GM approaches would involve changing the timing of expression of these peptides to promote nodulation. Our work uses the model Medicago truncatula, but the information that we will gain will be broadly relevant since M. truncatula has a high degree of synteny with cultivated legume crops including the grassland crop Medicago sativa and soybean, a globally important crop. We aim to start developing these methods to enhance nodulation within 3-5 years of the project starting.

Maximising the potential of legume plants that do not require nitrogen fertiliser could have a large and long-term impact. Key end-users include farmers who want to reduce the application of fertilisers and irrigation to save money, organic farmers who want to understand how to increase crop yield without adding fertiliser, and those interested in producing novel crops such as Syngenta, an agri-tech company with strong ties to Warwick. These impacts are likely to be longer term (8+ years) but we will plan for these within the lifetime of the grant by talking to relevant industries and companies that Warwick already engages with.

The new types of scientific discoveries that we will make require research that brings together plant development, plant-microbe interactions and high-throughput molecular analyses. The PDRA and technician will benefit from training in these areas and their development and future career progression will be a key are of impact within the lifetime of the grant and beyond.

Members of the public who wish to continue to buy affordable food that is reliably available throughout the year will also benefit from this project. In order to sustainably increase food production we must grow crops that maintain high yields with fewer inputs. During this project we will generate fundamental knowledge that could help to improve the already substantial benefits that the growth of legume crops brings. This would also lead to a range of environmental and cost savings to farmers, the public and environmental policy makers. For example, there would be reduced river pollution due to lower nitrate fertiliser use and run-off, sustainable agricultural productivity, and also reduction in food miles to due higher efficiency farming methods. We expect to realise these benefits further ahead in time (10+ years) but will open a dialogue with the public and policy makers within the lifetime of the grant.
 
Description We are deciphering the impact of the plant's clock on plant nodulation. This is an interaction with bacteria that can provide nitrogen to the plant. We previously found the if the clock is modified, plant nodulation was impacted and we now know that this happens after a nodule is formed (rather than affecting if it is formed or not). We have also found that total number of hours in the day has a dramatic impact on nodulation, with plants under 15-15 or 18-18 light-dark having strikingly different levels of nodulation and plant growth. We are now working out which gene regulatory impacts are involved in these mechanisms..
Exploitation Route Manipulation of the clock function to boost nodulation and plant yield.
Sectors Agriculture, Food and Drink

 
Description UK-Brazil International Partnering Award: Development of novel strategies to address plant-microbes interactions in planta
Amount £25,202 (GBP)
Funding ID BB/W018659/1 
Organisation University of Warwick 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 04/2022 
End 03/2023
 
Title Plant circadian clock control of Medicago truncatula nodulation involving regulation of Nodule Cysteine-Rich genes 
Description Legumes house nitrogen-fixing endosymbiotic rhizobia in specialized polyploid cells within root nodules, which undergo tightly regulated metabolic activity. By carrying out expression analysis of transcripts over time in Medicago truncatula nodules we found that the circadian clock enables coordinated control of metabolic and regulatory processes linked to nitrogen fixation. This involves the circadian clock-associated transcriptional factor LATE ELONGATED HYPOCOTYL (LHY), with lhy mutants being affected in nodulation. Rhythmic transcripts in root nodules include a subset of Nodule-specific Cysteine Rich peptides (NCRs) that have the LHY-bound conserved Evening Element in their promoters. Until now, studies have suggested that NCRs act to regulate bacteroid differentiation and keep the rhizobial population in check. However, these conclusions came from the study of a few members of this very large gene family that has complex diversified spatio-temporal expression. We suggest that rhythmic expression of NCRs may be important for temporal coordination of bacterial activity with the rhythms of the plant host, in order to ensure optimal symbiosis. This dataset supports the work in the paper but gives additional new information about circadian regulation of gene transcripts in roots, nodules and leaves. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Led to new international collaboration. 
URL https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061%2Fdryad.9s4mw6mgg
 
Description Development of novel strategies to address plant-microbes interactions in planta 
Organisation Universidade de São Paulo
Country Brazil 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution This is a new UK-Brazil international partnership to study plant-microbe interactions involved in symbiosis and regulation of plant growth and development influenced by the circadian clock between the University of Warwick and the University of São Paulo, Brazil. It brings together recent work by Isabelle Carré and Miriam Gifford at the University of Warwick uncovered the impact of the circadian clock on symbiotic interaction between the legume Medicago truncatula and nitrogen-fixing rhizobia, leading to a current BBSRC-funded project (BB/T015357/1; Achom et al. 2021 Journal of Experimental Botany).
Collaborator Contribution It also links the work of Isabelle Carré and Gary Bending at the University of Warwick who discovered that plant circadian rhythms influence the composition of the rhizosphere microbiome (Newman et al., Under Revision). Joining forces with Carlos Hotta and Marie-Anne Van Sluys at the University of São Paulo, Brazil, will enable us to access expertise on circadian rhythms and endophytes in the important crop of sugarcane (Dantas et al. 2021 New Phytologist). It will also bring enable use of fluorescent bacterial cell lines, which will be valuable tools for validation of our experimental approaches.
Impact Updated March 2023: (1) Researcher exchange from University of São Paulo -> University of Warwick (November 2022): researchers developed bacterial GFP-lines to track endophyte colonisation of Setaria viridis at Warwick and learnt methods for cell dissociation from tissue, and cell sorting. (2) Researcher exchange from University of Warwick -> University of São Paulo (February 2023): researchers developed methods to separate and sequence endophytes, using a range of cell strainers and sequence of dissociation methods. Next we plan a bilateral workshop to plan next steps.
Start Year 2022
 
Description Sino-UK Green Agriculture Centre for plant science student mobility 
Organisation North West Agriculture and Forestry University
Country China 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Both the School of Life Sciences (Warwick) and the College of Agronomy (NWAFU) have great strengths in plant and crop science, and a number of direct collaborations for research. To maximise these and enable UG, MSc and PhD students to benefit from these links we have established a joint virtual centre: https://en.nwsuaf.edu.cn/news/92994.htm The establishment of the Sino-UK Green Agriculture Center marks the launch of multi-disciplinary cooperation in crop breeding, smart agriculture and plant pathology. My particular expertise in microbiome research has helped this partnership to develop.
Collaborator Contribution So far we have had a number of meetings to discuss joint research plans and arranged for three PhD students to come for short visits from NWAFU to Warwick in Feb-May 2020. We had to postpone these due to the Covid-19 situation, but expect them to come later in 2021.
Impact None yet.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Meet the Academics series 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Undergraduate students
Results and Impact This was a chance to talk about a career in academic research to university students inc. undergraduate and postgraduate students. Afterwards the students reported that they wanted to get more involved in the research of the department once this is possible, including students that would not have otherwise put themselves forward.

This was broadcast live but is also available online for future viewing.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://web.microsoftstream.com/video/a6d55afa-89b4-4def-9dcf-c8e75bfad0f8
 
Description School visit 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact Talk about how research can be carried out at University; focus on examples from 'Nfix in time' project as it showed the ups and downs. Students reported better understanding of how science research operates and how they can get involved.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Waitrose CTP Career Day 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact Participation in careers symposium including Waitrose CTP final year PhD students plus the Rothamsted Research PhD students.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022