- Nagata, Maki;
- Yamamoto, Naoya;
- Shigeyama, Tamaki;
- Terasawa, Yohei;
- Anai, Toyoaki;
- Sakai, Tatsuya;
- Inada, Sayaka;
- Arima, Susumu;
- Hashiguchi, Masatsugu;
- Akashi, Ryo;
- Nakayama, Hideyuki;
- Ueno, Daisuke;
- Hirsch, Ann M;
- Suzuki, Akihiro
Establishment of a nitrogen-fixing symbiosis between legumes and rhizobia not only requires sufficient photosynthate, but also the sensing of the ratio of red to far red (R/FR) light. Here, we show that R/FR light sensing also positively influences the arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis of a legume and a non-legume through jasmonic acid (JA) and strigolactone (SL) signaling. The level of AM colonization in high R/FR light-grown tomato and Lotus japonicus significantly increased compared with that determined for low R/FR light-grown plants. Transcripts for JA-related genes were also elevated under high R/FR conditions. The root exudates derived from high R/FR light-grown plants contained more (+)-5-deoxystrigol, an AM-fungal hyphal branching inducer, than those from low R/FR light-grown plants. In summary, high R/FR light changes not only the levels of JA and SL synthesis, but also the composition of plant root exudates released into the rhizosphere, in this way augmenting the AM symbiosis.