Soybeans fix atmospheric N2 through symbiosis with rhizobia. The relationship between rhizobia and soybeans, particularly those with high nitrous oxide (N2O)-reducing (N2OR) activities, can be leveraged to reduce N2O emissions from agricultural soils. However, inoculating soybeans with these rhizobia under field conditions often fails because of the competition from indigenous rhizobia that possess low or no N2OR activity. In this work, we utilize natural incompatibility systems between soybean and rhizobia to address this challenge. Specifically, Rj2 and GmNNL1 inhibit certain rhizobial infections in response to NopP, an effector protein. By combining a soybean line with a hybrid accumulation of the Rj2 and GmNNL1 genes and bradyrhizobia lacking the nopP gene, we develop a soybean-bradyrhizobial symbiosis system in which strains with high N2OR activity predominantly infect. Our optimize symbiotic system substantially reduces N2O emissions in field and laboratory tests, presenting a promising approach for sustainable agricultural practices. During plant cultivation, denitrification process can release greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O) to atmosphere. Here, the authors develop a soybean–bradyrhizobial symbiosis system with enhanced capacity to reduce N2O emissions using the incompatibility between two soybean R genes and their effector present in bradyrhizobia.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Hanna Nishida
National Agriculture and Food Research Organization
Manabu Itakura
Tohoku University
Khin Thuzar Win
National Agriculture and Food Research Organization
Nature Communications
Tohoku University
RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science
Institute of Agrobiological Sciences
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Nishida et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68c18c019b7b07f3a06145b0 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-63223-6