首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
Three Glycine genotypes, G. max cv. Williams, G. soja PI 468397, and G. soja PI 342434 in combination with the two rhizobial strains Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 123 and Rhizobium fredii USDA 193 were analysed for phytoalexin concentration in the nodules. In the nodules of PI 468397/B. japonicum USDA 123 a very strong glyceollin I accumulation occurred around 30 d.p.i. Ultrastructural analysis of these nodules revealed several symptoms of a severe plant defense response associated with plant cell death (hypersensitive reaction): The cytoplasm of the infected cells was degraded and organelles had vanished. The cell walls of the infected cells showed remarkable thickening. This plant defense response could only be observed in this strain/genotype interaction. The same strain did not elicit a phytoalexin accumulation in the other plant genotypes tested, indicating that this response occurs at the genotype-specific level. This special character of G. soja PI 468397 is heritable as indicated by glyceollin I analysis of the nodules formed by F1 hybrids of PI 468397xWilliams inoculated with B. japonicum USDA 123. The genotype/strain specific occurrence of the hypersensitive response in root nodules resembles the race/cultivar specific incompatibility of several plant-pathogen interactions. This specificity, together with the phenomenon of the HR itself, points out the close physiological relationship between the late stages of the root nodule symbiosis and a plant/pathogen interaction.  相似文献   

2.
Strains in Bradyrhizobium japonicum serocluster 123 are the major indigenous competitors for nodulation in a large portion of the soybean production area of the United States. Serocluster 123 is defined by the serotype strains USDA 123, USDA 127, and USDA 129. The objective of the work reported here was to evaluate the ability of two soybean genotypes, PI 377578 and PI 417566, to restrict the nodulation and reduce the competitiveness of serotype strains USDA 123, USDA 127, and USDA 129 in favor of the highly effective strain CB1809 and to determine how these soybean genotypes alter the competitive relationships among the three serotype strains in the serocluster. The soybean genotypes PI 377578 and PI 417566 along with the commonly grown cultivar Williams were planted in soil essentially free of soybean rhizobia and inoculated with single-strain treatments of USDA 123, USDA 127, USDA 129, or CB1809 and six dual-strain competition treatments of USDA 123, USDA 127, or USDA 129 versus CB1809, USDA 123 versus USDA 127, USDA 123 versus USDA 129, and USDA 127 versus USDA 129. PI 377578 severely reduced the nodulation and competitiveness of USDA 123 and USDA 127, while PI 417566 similarly affected the nodulation and competitiveness of USDA 129. Thus, the two soybean genotypes can reduce the nodulation and competitiveness of each of the three serocluster 123 serotype strains. Our results indicate that host control of restricted nodulation and reduced competitiveness is quite specific and effectively discriminates between B. japonicum strains which are serologically related.  相似文献   

3.
Twenty recently obtained field isolates of Bradyrhizobium japonicum serogroup 123 were tested for their nodule mass production on the standard commercial soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr. cv. Williams) and on two soybean plant introduction (PI) genotypes previously determined to restrict nodulation by strain USDA 123. Four of the field isolates showed similar restricted nodulation on the two genotypes, while all 20 isolates produced a normal amount of nodules on G. max cv. Williams. Serological analyses with adsorbed fluorescent antibodies showed that members of the 123 serotype ranked low in nodulation of the two PIs, in contrast to members of serotypes 127 and 129. Competition studies on the PIs indicated that isolates which were restricted were not competitive for nodule occupancy against strain USDA 110. However, unrestricted isolates of serogroup 123 were very competitive against USDA 110. On G. max cv. Williams, all serogroup 123 isolates tested were very competitive against USDA 110.  相似文献   

4.
Nodulation, acetylene reduction activity, dry matter accumulation, and total nitrogen accumulation by nodulated plants growing in a nitrogen-free culture system were used to compare the symbiotic effectiveness of the fast-growing Rhizobium fredii USDA 191 with that of the slow-growing Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110 in symbiosis with five soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) cultivars. Measurement of the amount of nitrogen accumulated during a 20-day period of vegetative growth (28 to 48 days after transplanting) showed that USDA 110 fixed 3.7, 39.1, 4.6, and 57.3 times more N2 than did USDA 191 with cultivars Pickett 71, Harosoy 63, Lee, and Ransom as host plants, respectively. With the unimproved Peking cultivar as the host plant, USDA 191 fixed 3.3 times more N2 than did the USDA 110 during the 20-day period. The superior N2 fixation capability of USDA 110 with the four North American cultivars as hosts resulted primarily from higher nitrogenase activity per unit nodule mass (specific acetylene reduction activity) and higher nodule mass per plant. The higher N2-fixation capability of USDA 191 with the Peking cultivar as host resulted primarily from higher nodule mass per plant, which was associated with higher nodule numbers. There was significant variation in the N2-fixation capabilities of the four North American cultivar-USDA 191 symbioses. Pickett 71 and Lee cultivars fixed significantly more N2 in symbiosis with USDA 191 than did the Harosoy 63 and Ransom cultivars. This quantitative variation in N2-fixation capability suggests that the total incompatibility (effectiveness of nodulation and efficiency of N2 fixation) of host soybean plants and R. fredii strains is regulated by more than one host plant gene. These results indicate that it would not be prudent to introduce R. fredii strains into North American agricultural systems until more efficient N2-fixing symbioses between North American cultivars and these fast-growing strains can be developed. When inoculum containing equal numbers of USDA 191 and of strain USDA 110 was applied to the unimproved Peking cultivar in Perlite pot culture, 85% of the 160 nodules tested were occupied by USDA 191. With Lee and Ransom cultivars, 99 and 85% of 140 and 96 nodules tested, respectively, were occupied by USDA 110.  相似文献   

5.
Heron DS  Pueppke SG 《Plant physiology》1987,84(4):1391-1396
Double inoculation (15 h apart) of the soybean cultivar Williams with Bradyrhizobium japonicum I-110ARS reveals a rapid regulatory plant response that inhibits nodulation of distal portions of the primary root (M Pierce, WD Bauer 1984 Plant Physiol 73: 286-290). Only living, homologous rhizobia elicit the response. We conducted similar double inoculation experiments to test the hypothesis that this is a universal phenomenon in soybean symbioses. We investigated interactions of the cultivar McCall with the slow-growing strain Bradyrhizobium sp. 3185 (=3G4b16) and strains of the fast-growing soybean symbiont, Rhizobium fredii (USDA191 [Nod+ on McCall] and USDA257 [Nod on McCall]). Nodulation was not detectably inhibited when USDA257 was included in various combinations with an inoculum of USDA191. Strain USDA257 cohabited nodules with strain USDA191 when plants were inoculated sequentially with both strains, but USDA257 did not nodulate McCall when a sterile culture filtrate of USDA191 was added to USDA257 inoculum. There was only a slight inhibition of nodulation of distal portions of the primary root in double inoculation experiments with McCall and strain 3185. Because these results were unexpected, we repeated the experiments with Williams and strain I-110ARS. The response was similar to that observed in the McCall × 3185 interaction. Regulation of nodulation on the primary root thus appears to be variable and depend on strain X cultivar interactions.  相似文献   

6.
Three slow-growingBradyrhizobium japonicum (G3, USDA-110 and KUL-150) of diverse origins and two fast-growing strains ofRhizobium fredii (USDA-192 and USDA-193) were tested with a cropped soybean (Glycine max L. Merrill) cultivar, two cowpeas (Vigna unguiculata), one mung-bean (Phaseolus radiata), one winged-bean (Psophocarpus tetragonolobus) and one field bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) varieties.TheR. fredii strains nodulated and fixed Nitrogen as effectively as the strains ofB. japonicum in a modern european soybean cultivar, namely Fiskeby V. The other western bred soybeans tested were not nodulated by theseR. fredii strains. All of the soybean rhizobia produced nodules in both cowpeas and in mung-bean; theR. fredii strains showed effective N2-fixation in the cowpeas, particularly USDA-193, yielding shoot dry weights greater than those from theB. japonicum. The symbiotic performance of theR. fredii strains with soybean and other legumes indicated that they should be placed in an intermediate group between the slow-growingB. japonicum and cowpearhizobium sp.The hydrogen uptake activites suggested a possible host effect on the expression of such genes in one out of theB. japonicum strains tested. Furthermore, the slow-growing rhizobia showed significantly higher nitrate-reduction than theR. fredii in the nodules.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of several biotic and abiotic factors on the pattern of competition between two strains of Rhizobium japonicum was examined. In two Minnesota soils, Waseca and Waukegan, strain USDA 123 occupied 69% (Waseca) and 24% (Waukegan) of the root nodules on Glycine max L. Merrill cv. Chippewa. USDA 110 occupied 2% of the root nodules in the Waseca soil and 12% of the nodules in the Waukegan soil. Under a variety of other growth conditions—vermiculite, vermiculite amended with Waseca soil, and two Hawaiian soils devoid of naturalized Rhizobium japonicum strains—USDA 110 was more competitive than USDA 123. The addition of nitrate to or the presence of antibiotic-producing actinomycetes in the rhizosphere of soybeans did not affect the pattern of competition between the two strains. However, preexposure of young seedings to USDA 110 or USDA 123 before transplantation into soil altered the pattern of competition between the two strains significantly. In the Waseca soil, preexposure of cv. Chippewa to USDA 110 for 72 h increased the percentage of nodules occupied by USDA 110 from 2 to 55%. Similarly, in the Hawaiian soil Waimea, nodule occupancy by USDA 123 increased from 7 to 33% after a 72-h preexposure.  相似文献   

8.
Sinorhizobium fredii USDA257 employs type III secretion system (T3SS) to deliver effector proteins into the host cells through pili. The nopA protein is the major component of USDA257 pili. The promoter region of USDA257 nopA possesses a well conserved tts box. Serial deletion analysis revealed that the tts box is absolutely essential for flavonoid induction of nopA. Deletion of nopA drastically lowered the number of nodules formed by USDA257 on cowpea and soybean cultivar Peking. In contrast to the parental strain, the USDA257 nopA mutant was able to form few nodules on soybean cultivars McCall and Williams 82. Light and transmission electron microscopy examination of these nodules revealed numerous starch grains both in the infected and uninfected cells.  相似文献   

9.
The symbiotic potential of Bradyrhizobium japonicum isolates indigenous to seven Korean soils was evaluated by inoculating soybeans with 10- and 1,000-fold-diluted soil suspensions (whole-soil inocula). At both levels, significant differences in the symbiotic potential of the indigenous B. japonicum isolates were demonstrated. The relationship between rhizobial numbers in the whole-soil inocula (x) and nitrogen fixation parameters (y) was best predicted by a straight line (y = a + bx) when the numbers in the inocula were 100 to 10,000 ml-1, while the power curve (y = axb) predicted the variation when the numbers were 1 to 100 ml-1. Thirty isolates from three soils showed wide differences in effectiveness (measured as milligrams of shoot N per plant), and several were of equal or greater effectiveness than reference strain B. japonicum USDA 110 on soybean cultivars Clark and Jangbaekkong. On both of the soybean cultivars grown in a Hawaiian mollisol, the Korean B. japonicum isolate YCK 213 and USDA 110 were of equal effectiveness; USDA 110 was the superior strain in colonization (nodule occupancy). Korean isolates YCK 117 and YCK 141 were superior colonizers compared with USDA 110. However, B. japonicum USDA 123 was the superior colonizer compared with isolates YCK 213, YCK 141, and YCK 117. In an immunoblot analysis of 97 indigenous Korean isolates of B. japonicum, 41% fell into the USDA 110 and USDA 123 serogroups. Serogroups USDA 110 and USDA 123 were represented in six of the seven soils examined. In one Korean soil, 100% of the B. japonicum isolates reacted only with antisera of YCK 117, an isolate from the same soil.  相似文献   

10.
N2O reductase activity in soybean nodules formed with Bradyrhizobium japonicum was evaluated from N2O uptake and conversion of 15N-N2O into 15N-N2. Free-living cells of USDA110 showed N2O reductase activity, whereas a nosZ mutant did not. Complementation of the nosZ mutant with two cosmids containing the nosRZDFYLX genes of B. japonicum USDA110 restored the N2O reductase activity. When detached soybean nodules formed with USDA110 were fed with 15N-N2O, they rapidly emitted 15N-N2 outside the nodules at a ratio of 98.5% of 15N-N2O uptake, but nodules inoculated with the nosZ mutant did not. Surprisingly, N2O uptake by soybean roots nodulated with USDA110 was observed even in ambient air containing a low concentration of N2O (0.34 ppm). These results indicate that the conversion of N2O to N2 depends exclusively on the respiratory N2O reductase and that soybean roots nodulated with B. japonicum carrying the nos genes are able to remove very low concentrations of N2O.  相似文献   

11.
The pigeon pea strains of Bradyrhizobium CC-1, CC-8, UASGR(S), and F4 were evaluated for nodulation, effectiveness for N2 fixation, and H2 oxidation with homologous and nonhomologous host plants. Strain CC-1 nodulated Macroptilium atropurpureum, Vigna unguiculata, Glycine max, and G. soja but did not nodulate Pisum sativum, Phaseolus vulgaris, Trigonella foenum-graecum, and Trifolium repens. Strain F4 nodulated G. max cv. Peking and PI 434937 (Malayan), but the symbioses formed were poor. Similarly, G. max cv. Peking, cv. Bragg, PI 434937, PR 13-28-2-8-7, and HM-1 were nodulated by strain CC-1, and symbioses were also poor. G. max cv. Williams and cv. Clark were not nodulated. H2 uptake activity was expressed with pigeon pea and cowpea, but not with soybean. G. max cv. Bragg grown in Bangalore, India, in local soil not previously exposed to Bradyrhizobium japonicum formed nodules with indigenous Bradyrhizobium spp. Six randomly chosen isolates, each originating from a different nodule, formed effective symbioses with pigeon pea host ICPL-407, nodulated PR 13-28-2-8-7 soybean forming moderately effective symbioses, and did not nodulate Williams soybean. These results indicate the six isolates to be pigeon pea strains although they originated from soybean nodules. Host-determined nodulation of soybean by pigeon pea Bradyrhizobium spp. may depend upon the ancestral backgrounds of the cultivars. The poor symbioses formed by the pigeon pea strains with soybean indicate that this crop should be inoculated with B. japonicum for its cultivation in soils containing only pigeon pea Bradyrhizobium spp.  相似文献   

12.
Certain strains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum form a previously unknown polysaccharide in the root nodules of soybean plants (Glycine max (L.) Merr.). The polysaccharide accumulates inside of the symbiosome membrane—the plant-derived membrane enclosing the bacteroids. In older nodules (60 days after planting), the polysaccharide occupies most of the symbiosome volume and symbiosomes become enlarged so that there is little host cytoplasm in infected cells. The two different groups of B. japonicum which produce different types of polysaccharide in culture produce polysaccharides of similar composition in nodules. Polysaccharide formed by group I strains (e.g., USDA 5 and USDA 123) is composed of rhamnose, galactose, and 2-O-methylglucuronic acid, while polysaccharide formed by group II strains (e.g., USDA 31 and USDA 39) is composed of rhamnose and 4-O-methylglucuronic acid. That the polysaccharide is a bacterial product is indicated by its composition plus the fact that polysaccharide formation is independent of host genotype but is dependent on the bacterial genotype. Polysaccharide formation in nodules is common among strains in serogroups 123, 127, 129, and 31, with 27 of 39 strains (69%) testing positive. Polysaccharide formation in nodules is uncommon among other B. japonicum serogroups, with only 1 strain in 18 (6%) testing positive.  相似文献   

13.
Hydrogen (H2) is a by-product of the symbiotic nitrogen fixation (N2 fixation) between legumes and root-nodule bacteria (rhizobia). Some rhizobial strains have an uptake hydrogenase enzyme (commonly referred to as Hup+) that recycles H2 within the nodules. Other rhizobia, described as Hup?, do not have the enzyme and the H2 produced diffuses from the nodules into the soil where it is consumed by microorganisms. The effect of this phenomenon on the soil biota and on the soil itself, and consequent stimulation of plant growth, has been demonstrated previously. Soybeans [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] cv. Leichhardt, inoculated with either a Hup+ strain (CB1809) or one of two Hup? strains (USDA442 or USDA16) of Bradyrhizobium japonicum and uninoculated soybeans, plus a non-legume control [capsicum (Capsicum annuum L.)] were grown in the field at Ayr, North Queensland, Australia. The objectives were to examine (1) relationships between N2 fixation and H2 emission, and (2) the influence H2-induced changes in soil might have during the legume phase and/or on the performance of a following crop. Strains CB1809 and USDA442 were highly effective in N2 fixation (“good” fixers); USDA16 was partly effective (“poor” fixer). The soil had a large but non-uniformly distributed naturalised population of B. japonicum and most uninoculated control plants formed nodules that fixed some N2. These naturalised strains were classified as “poor fixers” of N2 and were Hup+. H2 emissions from nodules were assessed for all treatments when the soybean crop was 62 days old. Other parameters of symbiotic N2 fixation and plant productivity were measured when the crop was 62 and 96 days old and at crop maturity. Immediately after final harvest, the land was sown to a crop of maize (Zea mays L.) in order to determine the consequences of H2 emission from the soybean crop on maize growth. It was estimated that soybeans inoculated with USDA442, the highly effective Hup strain of B. japonicum, fixed 117 kg shoot N/ha (or about 195 kg total N/ha if the fixed N associated with roots and nodules was taken into account), and contributed about 215,000 l H2 gas per hectare to the ecosystem over the life of the crop. The volume of H2 evolved from soybeans nodulated by the Hup+ strain CB1809 was only 6% of that emitted by the USDA442 treatment, but there was no indication that soybean inoculated with USDA442 benefited from the additional H2 input. The shoot biomass, grain yield, and amounts of N fixed (105 kg shoot N/ha, 175 kg total N/ha) by the CB1809 treatment were little less than for USDA442 plants. Three days after the soybean crop was harvested, the plots were over-sown with maize along the same row lines in which the soybeans had grown. This procedure exposed the maize roots to whatever influence soybean H2 emission might have had on the soil and/or the soil microflora immediately surrounding soybean nodules. The evidence for a positive effect of soybean H2 emission on maize production was equivocal. While the consistent differences between those pre-treatments that emitted H2 and those that did not indicated a trend, only one difference (out of the 12 parameters of maize productivity that were measured) was statistically significant at P?<?0.05. The findings need substantiation by further investigation.  相似文献   

14.
It was previously demonstrated that there are no indigenous strains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum forming nitrogen-fixing root nodule symbioses with soybean plants in arable field soils in Poland. However, bacteria currently classified within this species are present (together with Bradyrhizobium canariense) as indigenous populations of strains specific for nodulation of legumes in the Genisteae tribe. These rhizobia, infecting legumes such as lupins, are well established in Polish soils. The studies described here were based on soybean nodulation field experiments, established at the Poznań University of Life Sciences Experiment Station in Gorzyń, Poland, and initiated in the spring of 1994. Long-term research was then conducted in order to study the relation between B. japonicum USDA 110 and USDA 123, introduced together into the same location, where no soybean rhizobia were earlier detected, and nodulation and competitive success were followed over time. Here we report the extra-long-term saprophytic survival of B. japonicum strains nodulating soybeans that were introduced as inoculants 20 years earlier and where soybeans were not grown for the next 17 years. The strains remained viable and symbiotically competent, and molecular and immunochemical methods showed that the strains were undistinguishable from the original inoculum strains USDA 110 and USDA 123. We also show that the strains had balanced numbers and their mobility in soil was low. To our knowledge, this is the first report showing the extra-long-term persistence of soybean-nodulating strains introduced into Polish soils and the first analyzing the long-term competitive relations of USDA 110 and USDA 123 after the two strains, neither of which was native, were introduced into the environment almost 2 decades ago.  相似文献   

15.
A broad-host-range plasmid, pEA2-21, containing a Bradyrhizobium japonicum nodABC'-'lacZ translational fusion was used to identify strain-specific inhibitors of the genes required for soybean nodulation, the common nod genes. The responses of type strains of B. japonicum serogroups USDA 110, USDA 123, USDA 127, USDA 129, USDA 122, and USDA 138 to nod gene inhibitors were compared. Few compounds inhibited nod gene expression in B. japonicum USDA 110. In contrast, nod gene expression in strains belonging to several other serogroups was inhibited by most of the flavonoids tested. However, the application of two of these strain-specific compounds, chrysin and naringenin, had little effect on the pattern of competition between indigenous and inoculum strains of B. japonicum in greenhouse and field trials. Preliminary studies with radiolabeled chrysin and naringenin suggest that the different responses to nod gene inhibitors may be partly due to the degree to which plant flavonoids can be metabolized by each strain.  相似文献   

16.
Free-living soybean rhizobia and Bradyrhizobium spp. (lupine) have the ability to catabolize ethanol. Of the 30 strains of rhizobia examined, only the fast- and slow-growing soybean rhizobia and the slow-growing Bradyrhizobium sp. (lupine) were capable of using ethanol as a sole source of carbon and energy for growth. Two strains from each of the other Rhizobium species examined (R. meliloti, R. loti, and R. leguminosarum biovars phaseoli, trifolii, and viceae) failed to grow on ethanol. One Rhizobium fredii (fast-growing) strain, USDA 191, and one (slow-growing) Bradyrhizobium japonicum strain, USDA 110, grew in ethanol up to concentrations of 3.0 and 1.0%, respectively. While three of the R. fredii strains examined (USDA 192, USDA 194, and USDA 205) utilized 0.2% acetate, only USDA 192 utilized 0.1% n-propanol. None of the three strains utilized 0.1% methanol, formate, or n-butanol as the sole carbon source.  相似文献   

17.
The interaction between the ATP-dependent evolution of H2 catalyzed by nitrogenase and the oxidation of H2 via a hydrogenase has been postulated to influence the efficiency of the N2-fixing process in nodulated legumes. A comparative study using soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) cv. Anoka inoculated with either Rhizobium japonicum strain USDA 31 or USDA 110 and cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L. Walp.) cv. Whippoorwill inoculated with Rhizobium strain 176A27 or 176A28 cultured on a N-free medium was conducted to address this question. Nodules from the Anoka cultivar inoculated with USDA 31 evolved H2 in air and the H2 produced accounted for about 30% of the energy transferred to the nitrogenase system during the period of active N2 fixation. In contrast the same soybean cultivar inoculated with USDA 110 produced nodules with an active hydrogenase and consequently did not evolve H2 in air. A comparison of Anoka soybeans inoculated with the two different strains of R. japonicum showed that mean rates of C2H2 reduction and O2 consumption and mean mass of nodules taken at four times during vegetative growth were not significantly different.

When compared to Anoka inoculated with USDA 31, the same cultivar inoculated with USDA 110 showed increases in total dry matter, per cent nitrogen, and total N2 fixed of 24, 7, and 31%, respectively. Cowpeas in symbiosis with the hydrogenase-producing strain 176A28 in comparison with the same cultivar inoculated with the H2-evolving strain 176A27 produced increases in plant dry weight and total N2 fixed of 11 and 15%, respectively. This apparent increase in the efficiency of N2 fixation for nodulated legumes capable of reutilizing the H2 evolved from nitrogenase is considered and it is concluded that provision of conclusive evidence of the role of the H2-recycling process in N2-fixing efficiency of legumes will require comparison of Rhizobium strains that are genetically identical with the exception of the presence of hydrogenase.

  相似文献   

18.
In the American Midwest, superior N2-fixing inoculant strains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum consistently fail to produce the majority of nodules on the roots of field-grown soybean. Poor nodulation by inoculant strains is partly due to their inability to stay abreast of the expanding soybean root system in numbers sufficient for them to be competitive with indigenous bradyrhizobia. However, certain strains are noncompetitive even when numerical dominance is not a factor. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that the nodule occupancy achieved by strains is related to their nodule-forming efficiency. The nodulation characteristics and competitiveness of nine strains of B. japonicum were compared at both 20 and 30°C. The root tip marking technique was used, with the nodule-forming efficiency of each strain estimated from the average position of the uppermost nodule and the number of nodules formed above the root tip mark. The competitiveness of the nine strains relative to B. japonicum USDA 110 was determined by using immunofluorescence to identify nodule occupants. The strains differed significantly in competitiveness with USDA 110 and in nodulation characteristics, strains that were poor competitors usually proving to be inferior in both the average position of the uppermost root nodule and the number of nodules formed above the root tip mark. Thus, competitiveness was correlated with both the average position of the uppermost nodule (r = 0.5; P = 0.036) and the number of nodules formed above the root tip mark (r = 0.64; P = 0.005), while the position of the uppermost nodule was also correlated to the percentage of plants nodulated above the root tip mark (r = 0.81; P < 0.001) and the percentage of plants nodulated on the taproot (r = 0.67; P = 0.002).  相似文献   

19.
The importance of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) in the evolution and speciation of bacteria has been emphasized; however, most studies have focused on genes clustered in pathogenesis and very few on symbiosis islands. Both soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merrill) and compatible Bradyrhizobium japonicum and Bradyrhizobium elkanii strains are exotic to Brazil and have been massively introduced in the country since the early 1960s, occupying today about 45% of the cropped land. For the past 10 years, our group has obtained several isolates showing high diversity in morphological, physiological, genetic, and symbiotic properties in relation to the putative parental inoculant strains. In this study, parental strains and putative natural variants isolated from field-grown soybean nodules were genetically characterized in relation to conserved genes (by repetitive extragenic palindromic PCR using REP and BOX A1R primers, PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism, and sequencing of the 16SrRNA genes), nodulation, and N2-fixation genes (PCR-RFLP and sequencing of nodY-nodA, nodC, and nifH genes). Both genetic variability due to adaptation to the stressful environmental conditions of the Brazilian Cerrados and HGT events were confirmed. One strain (S 127) was identified as an indigenous B. elkanii strain that acquired a nodC gene from the inoculant B. japonicum. Another one (CPAC 402) was identified as an indigenous Sinorhizobium (Ensifer) fredii strain that received the whole symbiotic island from the B. japonicum inoculant strain and maintained an extra copy of the original nifH gene. The results highlight the strategies that bacteria may commonly use to obtain ecological advantages, such as the acquisition of genes to establish effective symbioses with an exotic host legume.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of temperature and soil type on interstrain competition of Bradyrhizobium japonicum and on nodulation and nitrogen accumulation in five soybean varieties belonging to four maturity groups were investigated at three sites devoid of soybean rhizobia along an elevational transect in Hawaii. Competition patterns of the three B. japonicum strains were unaffected by soil type or soil temperature. Strain USDA 110 was the best competitor, occupying on the average 81 and 64% of the nodules in the field and greenhouse experiments, respectively. Strain USDA 138 was the least successful in the field (4%), although it formed 34% of the nodules in the greenhouse. Nodule occupancy by B. japonicum strains was found to be related to soybean maturity group. Strain USDA 110 formed 61, 71, 88, 88, and 98% of the nodules in the field on Clay (00), Clark (IV), D68-0099 (VI), N77-4262 (VI), and Hardee (VIII), respectively. Strain USDA 136b formed few nodules on Hardee, an Rj2 soybean variety incompatible with that strain, in both experiments. Nodule number and weight at the 1,050-m site were reduced to 41 and 27%, respectively, of those at the 320-m site because of the decrease in temperature. Nodule number increased with increasing maturity group number at each site; however, there was not a corresponding increase in nodule weight. Nitrogen accumulation decreased from 246 mg of N per plant at the lowest elevation site to 26 mg of N per plant at the highest elevation. While soil type and temperature had no effect on strain competition, temperature had a profound influence on nodule parameters and plant growth.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号