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Interacting Partners of the SUNN Symbiotic Regulatory Kinase

$97,934FY2010BIONSF

Clemson University, Clemson SC

Investigators

Abstract

Symbiotic associations between two organisms cost each organism resources in exchange for the benefits they receive from the association; thus they are tightly regulated by both partners. In the case of the relationship between the legume plant M. truncatula and its bacterial partner, a major plant regulator of the number of symbiotic nitrogen-fixing nodules that form is a protein called SUNN. SUNN regulates the interaction systemically (throughout the plant) and thus must communicate regulation through other proteins not yet identified. This project addresses the question of what proteins interact with SUNN by taking the critical first step of creating a tool to answer the question. The investigators will create a plant carrying a version of SUNN with a tag to allow retrieval of SUNN and interacting proteins from whole plants for analysis. The tag is a short piece of protein for which commercial antibodies are available, allowing the investigators to isolate SUNN through standard techniques and then identify the interacting partner proteins. The investigators will prove that this tagged protein behaves like the normal version of SUNN by a genetic technique called complementation, in which the tagged SUNN placed in a mutant plant with no SUNN protein restores the mutant plant to normality. Because legumes contribute to 33% of humankind's protein intake and serve as an important source of fodder and forage for animals as well as a source of edible and industrial oils, understanding the signaling involved in regulating legume symbiosis will allow scientists to develop strategies to maintain soil quality and sustainability while protecting the environment over the long term, reducing costs for food and biofuel production. Undergraduate students, including members of under-represented groups, will be trained as part of this project, and will be recruited every year through existing programs.

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