Abstract: | The aim of this study is to evaluate the contribution of bacteroidproline catabolism as an adaptation to drought stress in soybeanplants. To accomplish this, soybeans (Glycine max L. Merr.)were inoculated with either a parental strain of Bradyrhizobiumjaponicum which was able to catabolize proline, or a mutantstrain unable to catabolize proline. A large strain-dependentdifference in nodule number and size was observed. In orderto separate inoculant-dependent effects on nodulation from effectson bacteroid proline catabolism, plants inoculated with eachstrain were only compared to other plants inoculated with thesame strain, thus removing the observed inoculant-dependentdifferences in nodulation as a bar to interpretation of theresults. This experimental design allowed a comparison of thedrought penalty on yield for plants with parental bacteroidsand for plants with mutant bacteroids. The two results werethen compared to each other in order to evaluate the impactof the ability of bacteroids to catabolize proline on the responseto drought stress. When water stress was mild, soybean plants inoculated with bacteriaunable to catabolize proline suffered twice the percentage decreasein seed yield as did plants inoculated with bacteria able tocatabolize proline. However, when stress was severe there wasno significant effect of the ability of bacteroids to catabolizeproline on drought imposed decrease in seed yield. These resultssuggest that increasing the oxidative flux of proline in bacteroidsmight provide an agronomically significant yield advantage whenstress is modest, but that severe drought stress would probablyoverwhelm this yield benefit. Key words: N2-fixation, proline dehydrogenase, drought stress |