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Dive into the research topics where Elena Fedorova is active.

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Featured researches published by Elena Fedorova.


Science | 2010

A Nodule-Specific Protein Secretory Pathway Required for Nitrogen-Fixing Symbiosis

Dong Wang; Joel S. Griffitts; Colby G. Starker; Elena Fedorova; Erik Limpens; Sergey Ivanov; Ton Bisseling; Sharon R. Long

Legume Symbiosome Leguminous plants (peas and beans) are major players in global nitrogen cycling by virtue of their symbioses with nitrogen-fixing bacteria that are harbored in specialized structures, called nodules, on the plants roots. Van de Velde et al. (p. 1122) show that the host plant, Medicago truncatula produces nodule-specific cysteine-rich peptides, resembling natural plant defense peptides. The peptides enter the bacterial cells and promote its development into the mature symbiont. In a complementary study, D. Wang et al. (p. 1126), have identified the signal peptidase, also encoded by the plant, that is required for processing these specialized peptides into their active form. Products encoded by the leguminous plant Medicago direct the differentiation of the bacterial partner in symbiosis. The nitrogen-fixing symbiosis between Sinorhizobium meliloti and its leguminous host plant Medicago truncatula occurs in a specialized root organ called the nodule. Bacteria that are released into plant cells are surrounded by a unique plant membrane compartment termed a symbiosome. We found that in the symbiosis-defective dnf1 mutant of M. truncatula, bacteroid and symbiosome development are blocked. We identified the DNF1 gene as encoding a subunit of a signal peptidase complex that is highly expressed in nodules. By analyzing data from whole-genome expression analysis, we propose that correct symbiosome development in M. truncatula requires the orderly secretion of protein constituents through coordinated up-regulation of a nodule-specific pathway exemplified by DNF1.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Rhizobium–legume symbiosis shares an exocytotic pathway required for arbuscule formation

S. Ivanov; Elena Fedorova; Erik Limpens; De S. Mita; Andrea Genre; Paola Bonfante; Ton Bisseling

Endosymbiotic interactions are characterized by the formation of specialized membrane compartments, by the host in which the microbes are hosted, in an intracellular manner. Two well-studied examples, which are of major agricultural and ecological importance, are the widespread arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis and the Rhizobium–legume symbiosis. In both symbioses, the specialized host membrane that surrounds the microbes forms a symbiotic interface, which facilitates the exchange of, for example, nutrients in a controlled manner and, therefore, forms the heart of endosymbiosis. Despite their key importance, the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying the formation of these membrane interfaces are largely unknown. Recent studies strongly suggest that the Rhizobium–legume symbiosis coopted a signaling pathway, including receptor, from the more ancient arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis to form a symbiotic interface. Here, we show that two highly homologous exocytotic vesicle-associated membrane proteins (VAMPs) are required for formation of the symbiotic membrane interface in both interactions. Silencing of these Medicago VAMP72 genes has a minor effect on nonsymbiotic plant development and nodule formation. However, it blocks symbiosome as well as arbuscule formation, whereas root colonization by the microbes is not affected. Identification of these VAMP72s as common symbiotic regulators in exocytotic vesicle trafficking suggests that the ancient exocytotic pathway forming the periarbuscular membrane compartment has also been coopted in the Rhizobium–legume symbiosis.


Planta | 1999

Localization of H(+)-ATPases in soybean root nodules.

Elena Fedorova; Rowena Thomson; Lynne Whitehead; Oliver Maudoux; Michael K. Udvardi; David A. Day

Abstract. The localization of H+-ATPases in soybean (Glycine max L. cv. Stevens) nodules was investigated using antibodies against both P-type and V-type enzymes. Immunoblots of peribacteroid membrane (PBM) proteins using antibodies against tobacco and Arabidopsis H+-ATPases detected a single immunoreactive band at approximately 100 kDa. These antibodies recognized a protein of similar relative molecular mass in the crude microsomal fraction from soybean nodules and uninoculated roots. The amount of this protein was greater in PBM from mature nodules than in younger nodules. Immunolocalization of P-type ATPases using silver enhancement of colloidal-gold labelling at the light-microscopy level showed signal distributed around the periphery of non-infected cells in both the nodule cortex and nodule parenchyma. In the central nitrogen-fixing zone of the nodule, staining was present in both the infected and uninfected cells. Examination of nodule sections using confocal microscopy and fluorescence staining showed an immunofluorescent signal clearly visible around the periphery of individual symbiosomes which appeared as vesicles distributed throughout the infected cells of the central zone. Electron-microscopic examination of immunogold-labelled sections shows that P-type ATPase antigens were present on the PBM of both newly formed, single-bacteroid symbiosomes just released from infection threads, and on the PBM of mature symbiosomes containing two to four bacteroids. Immunogold labelling using antibody against the B-subunit of V-type ATPase from oat failed to detect this protein on symbiosome membranes. Only a very faint signal with this antibody was detected on Western blots of purified PBM. During nodule development, fusion of small symbiosomes to form larger ones containing multiple bacteroids was observed. Fusion was preceded by the formation of cone-like extensions of the PBM, allowing the membrane to make contact with the adjoining membrane of another symbiosome. We conclude that the major H+-ATPase on the PBM of soybean is a P-type enzyme with homology to other such enzymes in plants. In vivo, this enzyme is likely to play a critical role in the regulation of nutrient exchange between legume and bacteroids.


Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2010

Intracellular plant microbe associations: secretory pathways and the formation of perimicrobial compartments

Sergey Ivanov; Elena Fedorova; Ton Bisseling

Plants can establish intracellular interactions with symbiotic as well as pathogenic microbes. Such intracellular accommodation of microbes always involves the formation of a host membrane compartment--the interface between the cytoplasm of the host and the microbe. These are the so-called perimicrobial compartments. In this review we will focus on the rhizobial legume symbiosis in which the microbes are hosted in organelle-like compartments, which are named symbiosomes. The signaling events leading to infection and symbiosome formation are discussed. Further the role of the host cell endomembrane system in symbiosome formation is described and compared with the processes involved in arbuscule and haustorium formation during the interaction of plants and biotrophic fungi.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Soybean SAT1 (Symbiotic Ammonium Transporter 1) encodes a bHLH transcription factor involved in nodule growth and NH4+ transport

David Chiasson; Patrick C. Loughlin; Danielle Mazurkiewicz; Manijeh Mohammadi-Dehcheshmeh; Elena Fedorova; Mamoru Okamoto; Elizabeth McLean; Anthony D. M. Glass; Sally E. Smith; Ton Bisseling; Stephen D. Tyerman; David A. Day; Brent N. Kaiser

Significance The legume/rhizobia symbiosis involves a root-based exchange of bacterial fixed nitrogen for plant-derived photosynthetic carbon. The exchange takes place within the legume root nodule, which is a specialized root tissue that develops in response to plant and bacterial signal exchange. The bacteria reside within plant cells inside the nodule. In this study, we explore the activity of a membrane-bound soybean transcription factor, Glycine max basic–helix-loop–helix membrane 1, which is important for soybean nodule growth and is linked to the activity of a unique class of ammonium channels and to signaling cascades influencing a nodule circadian clock. Glycine max symbiotic ammonium transporter 1 was first documented as a putative ammonium (NH4+) channel localized to the symbiosome membrane of soybean root nodules. We show that Glycine max symbiotic ammonium transporter 1 is actually a membrane-localized basic helix–loop–helix (bHLH) DNA-binding transcription factor now renamed Glycine max bHLH membrane 1 (GmbHLHm1). In yeast, GmbHLHm1 enters the nucleus and transcriptionally activates a unique plasma membrane NH4+ channel Saccharomyces cerevisiae ammonium facilitator 1. Ammonium facilitator 1 homologs are present in soybean and other plant species, where they often share chromosomal microsynteny with bHLHm1 loci. GmbHLHm1 is important to the soybean rhizobium symbiosis because loss of activity results in a reduction of nodule fitness and growth. Transcriptional changes in nodules highlight downstream signaling pathways involving circadian clock regulation, nutrient transport, hormone signaling, and cell wall modification. Collectively, these results show that GmbHLHm1 influences nodule development and activity and is linked to a novel mechanism for NH4+ transport common to both yeast and plants.


The Plant Cell | 2014

Nod factor receptors form heteromeric complexes and are essential for intracellular infection in medicago nodules.

Sjef Moling; Anna Pietraszewska-Bogiel; Marten Postma; Elena Fedorova; Mark A. Hink; Erik Limpens; Theodorus W. J. Gadella; Ton Bisseling

The Medicago truncatula Nod factor receptors LYK3 and NFP accumulate in a narrow zone of approximately two cell layers in the nodule apex, where they form heteromeric complexes. This accumulation at the border of the meristem and the infection zone controls bacterial release, and its spatial restriction most likely prevents defense-like responses. Rhizobial Nod factors are the key signaling molecules in the legume-rhizobium nodule symbiosis. In this study, the role of the Nod factor receptors NOD FACTOR PERCEPTION (NFP) and LYSIN MOTIF RECEPTOR-LIKE KINASE3 (LYK3) in establishing the symbiotic interface in root nodules was investigated. It was found that inside Medicago truncatula nodules, NFP and LYK3 localize at the cell periphery in a narrow zone of about two cell layers at the nodule apex. This restricted accumulation is narrower than the region of promoter activity/mRNA accumulation and might serve to prevent the induction of defense-like responses and/or to restrict the rhizobium release to precise cell layers. The distal cell layer where the receptors accumulate at the cell periphery is part of the meristem, and the proximal layer is part of the infection zone. In these layers, the receptors can most likely perceive the bacterial Nod factors to regulate the formation of symbiotic interface. Furthermore, our Förster resonance energy transfer-fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy analysis indicates that NFP and LYK3 form heteromeric complexes at the cell periphery in M. truncatula nodules.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Microsymbiont discrimination mediated by a host-secreted peptide in Medicago truncatula

Shengming Yang; Qi Wang; Elena Fedorova; Jinge Liu; Qiulin Qin; Qiaolin Zheng; Paul A. Price; Huairong Pan; Dong Wang; Joel S. Griffitts; Ton Bisseling; Hongyan Zhu

Significance The legume–rhizobial symbiosis culminates in the formation of nitrogen-fixing root nodules. This symbiotic relationship plays a critical role in sustainable agriculture because it reduces the need for nitrogen fertilizers. However, nitrogen fixation efficiency varies tremendously between different plant–bacteria combinations, and the molecular mechanisms that regulate this specificity are not well understood. We report that this specificity is regulated by nodule-specific cysteine-rich (NCR) peptides in Medicago truncatula, a model legume closely related to alfalfa (Medicago sativa). Our finding provides insights into cross-kingdom signaling in host–bacterial symbioses and makes NCRs attractive agents for engineering legume–rhizobia pairs to optimize nitrogen fixation performance. The legume–rhizobial symbiosis results in the formation of root nodules that provide an ecological niche for nitrogen-fixing bacteria. However, plant–bacteria genotypic interactions can lead to wide variation in nitrogen fixation efficiency, and it is not uncommon that a bacterial strain forms functional (Fix+) nodules on one plant genotype but nonfunctional (Fix−) nodules on another. Host genetic control of this specificity is unknown. We herein report the cloning of the Medicago truncatula NFS1 gene that regulates the fixation-level incompatibility with the microsymbiont Sinorhizobium meliloti Rm41. We show that NFS1 encodes a nodule-specific cysteine-rich (NCR) peptide. In contrast to the known role of NCR peptides as effectors of endosymbionts’ differentiation to nitrogen-fixing bacteroids, we demonstrate that specific NCRs control discrimination against incompatible microsymbionts. NFS1 provokes bacterial cell death and early nodule senescence in an allele-specific and rhizobial strain-specific manner, and its function is dependent on host genetic background.


The Plant Cell | 2014

Adjustment of Host Cells for Accommodation of Symbiotic Bacteria: Vacuole Defunctionalization, HOPS Suppression, and TIP1g Retargeting in Medicago

Aleksandr Gavrin; Brent N. Kaiser; Dietmar Geiger; Stephen D. Tyerman; Zhengyu Wen; Ton Bisseling; Elena Fedorova

The accommodation of thousands of nitrogen-fixing rhizobia in legume root nodules requires changes in functionality of the vacuoles of infected cells. Suppression of HOPS tethering complex genes and tonoplast aquaporin retargeting to symbiosomes is part of the underlying mechanism. Defunctionalization of host vacuoles contributes to the expansion and maintenance of intracellular rhizobia. In legume–rhizobia symbioses, the bacteria in infected cells are enclosed in a plant membrane, forming organelle-like compartments called symbiosomes. Symbiosomes remain as individual units and avoid fusion with lytic vacuoles of host cells. We observed changes in the vacuole volume of infected cells and thus hypothesized that microsymbionts may cause modifications in vacuole formation or function. To examine this, we quantified the volumes and surface areas of plant cells, vacuoles, and symbiosomes in root nodules of Medicago truncatula and analyzed the expression and localization of VPS11 and VPS39, members of the HOPS vacuole-tethering complex. During the maturation of symbiosomes to become N2-fixing organelles, a developmental switch occurs and changes in vacuole features are induced. For example, we found that expression of VPS11 and VPS39 in infected cells is suppressed and host cell vacuoles contract, permitting the expansion of symbiosomes. Trafficking of tonoplast-targeted proteins in infected symbiotic cells is also altered, as shown by retargeting of the aquaporin TIP1g from the tonoplast membrane to the symbiosome membrane. This retargeting appears to be essential for the maturation of symbiosomes. We propose that these alterations in the function of the vacuole are key events in the adaptation of the plant cell to host intracellular symbiotic bacteria.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Comparative genomics of the nonlegume Parasponia reveals insights into evolution of nitrogen-fixing rhizobium symbioses

R. van Velzen; Rens Holmer; F. Bu; L.J.J. Rutten; A.L. van Zeijl; Weizhong Liu; Luca Santuari; Q. Cao; Trupti Sharma; Defeng Shen; Yuda Purwana Roswanjaya; T. Wardhani; M. Seifi Kalhor; Joelle Jansen; D.J. van den Hoogen; Berivan Güngör; Marijke Hartog; Jan Hontelez; Jan Verver; Wei-Cai Yang; Elio Schijlen; Rimi Repin; Menno Schilthuizen; M.E. Schranz; Renze Heidstra; Kana Miyata; Elena Fedorova; Wouter Kohlen; A.H.J. Bisseling; Sandra Smit

Significance Fixed nitrogen is essential for plant growth. Some plants, such as legumes, can host nitrogen-fixing bacteria within cells in root organs called nodules. Nodules are considered to have evolved in parallel in different lineages, but the genetic changes underlying this evolution remain unknown. Based on gene expression in the nitrogen-fixing nonlegume Parasponia andersonii and the legume Medicago truncatula, we find that nodules in these different lineages may share a single origin. Comparison of the genomes of Parasponia with those of related nonnodulating plants reveals evidence of parallel loss of genes that, in legumes, are essential for nodulation. Taken together, this raises the possibility that nodulation originated only once and was subsequently lost in many descendant lineages. Nodules harboring nitrogen-fixing rhizobia are a well-known trait of legumes, but nodules also occur in other plant lineages, with rhizobia or the actinomycete Frankia as microsymbiont. It is generally assumed that nodulation evolved independently multiple times. However, molecular-genetic support for this hypothesis is lacking, as the genetic changes underlying nodule evolution remain elusive. We conducted genetic and comparative genomics studies by using Parasponia species (Cannabaceae), the only nonlegumes that can establish nitrogen-fixing nodules with rhizobium. Intergeneric crosses between Parasponia andersonii and its nonnodulating relative Trema tomentosa demonstrated that nodule organogenesis, but not intracellular infection, is a dominant genetic trait. Comparative transcriptomics of P. andersonii and the legume Medicago truncatula revealed utilization of at least 290 orthologous symbiosis genes in nodules. Among these are key genes that, in legumes, are essential for nodulation, including NODULE INCEPTION (NIN) and RHIZOBIUM-DIRECTED POLAR GROWTH (RPG). Comparative analysis of genomes from three Parasponia species and related nonnodulating plant species show evidence of parallel loss in nonnodulating species of putative orthologs of NIN, RPG, and NOD FACTOR PERCEPTION. Parallel loss of these symbiosis genes indicates that these nonnodulating lineages lost the potential to nodulate. Taken together, our results challenge the view that nodulation evolved in parallel and raises the possibility that nodulation originated ∼100 Mya in a common ancestor of all nodulating plant species, but was subsequently lost in many descendant lineages. This will have profound implications for translational approaches aimed at engineering nitrogen-fixing nodules in crop plants.


New Phytologist | 2016

VAMP721a and VAMP721d are important for pectin dynamics and release of bacteria in soybean nodules

Aleksandr Gavrin; David Chiasson; Evgenia Ovchinnikova; Brent N. Kaiser; Ton Bisseling; Elena Fedorova

In root nodules rhizobia enter host cells via infection threads. The release of bacteria to a host cell is possible from cell wall-free regions of the infection thread. We hypothesized that the VAMP721d and VAMP721e exocytotic pathway, identified before in Medicago truncatula, has a role in the local modification of cell wall during the release of rhizobia. To clarify the role of VAMP721d and VAMP721e we used Glycine max, a plant with a determinate type of nodule. The localization of the main polysaccharide compounds of primary cell walls was analysed in control vs nodules with partially silenced GmVAMP721d. The silencing of GmVAMP721d blocked the release of rhizobia. Instead of rhizobia-containing membrane compartments - symbiosomes - the infected cells contained big clusters of bacteria embedded in a matrix of methyl-esterified and de-methyl-esterified pectin. These clusters were surrounded by a membrane. We found that GmVAMP721d-positive vesicles were not transporting methyl-esterified pectin. We hypothesized that they may deliver the enzymes involved in pectin turnover. Subsequently, we found that GmVAMP721d is partly co-localized with pectate lyase. Therefore, the biological role of VAMP721d may be explained by its action in delivering pectin-modifying enzymes to the site of release.

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Ton Bisseling

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Aleksandr Gavrin

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Erik Limpens

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Wouter Kohlen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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René Geurts

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Berivan Güngör

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Defeng Shen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Elio Schijlen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Jan Hontelez

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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