Description: |
[DBS Seminar] Prof. Maitrayee DasGupta (Department of Biochemistry, University of Calcutta) -- 'Deregulated Symbiosis receptor kinase hyperactivates spontaneous nodulation |
Date: |
Wednesday, Sep 16, 2015 |
Time: |
2 p.m. - 3 p.m. |
Venue: |
110, Lecture Hall Complex |
Details: |
Plants undertake symbioses with nitrogen-fixing bacteria that renders them
independent of nitrogen fertilizer. A compatible interaction triggers the
'Symbiosis response pathway' (Sym pathway) to initiate the genetic
reprogramming required for intracellular colonization of symbionts in the
newly divided cells of specialized structures called nodules that develop on
the roots of the host plant. This property of root nodule symbiosis is
restricted to a monophyletic clade of four angiosperm orders.
Gain-of-function alleles of some 'Sym pathway' genes can uncouple
organogenesis from infection and cause a development of empty spontaneous
nodules in the absence of the bacterial symbiont. The efficiency of
spontaneous nodulation under constitutive activity of these genes was either
same or lower than the rhizobia induced nodulation. Nevertheless these were
important signaling modules for transfering the capacity for symbiosis to
plants that are unable to obtain symbiotically fixed nitrogen. Our efforts
have shown that deregulated activation of Symbiosis Receptor Kinase, an
upstream receptor kinase of the 'Sym pathway' hyperactivated nodule
organogenesis and seems to have overcome the controls of both nodule number
and their spatial positioning.
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Calendar: |
Seminar Calendar (entered by abhadra) |