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1.
《Journal of plant physiology》2014,171(18):1732-1739
Legumes have the unique ability to fix atmospheric nitrogen (N2) via symbiotic bacteria in their nodules but depend heavily on phosphorus (P), which affects nodulation, and the carbon costs and energy costs of N2 fixation. Consequently, legumes growing in nutrient-poor ecosystems (e.g., sandstone-derived soils) have to enhance P recycling and/or acquisition in order to maintain N2 fixation. In this study, we investigated the flexibility of P recycling and distribution within the nodules and their effect on N nutrition in Virgilia divaricata Adamson, Fabaceae, an indigenous legume in the Cape Floristic Region of South Africa. Specifically, we assessed tissue elemental localization using micro-particle-induced X-ray emission (PIXE), measured N fixation using nutrient concentrations derived from inductively coupled mass-spectrometry (ICP-MS), calculated nutrient costs, and determined P recycling from enzyme activity assays. Morphological and physiological features characteristic of adaptation to P deprivation were observed for V. divaricata. Decreased plant growth and nodule production with parallel increased root:shoot ratios are some of the plastic features exhibited in response to P deficiency. Plants resupplied with P resembled those supplied with optimal P levels in terms of growth and nutrient acquisition. Under low P conditions, plants maintained an increase in N2-fixing efficiency despite lower levels of orthophosphate (Pi) in the nodules. This can be attributed to two factors: (i) an increase in Fe concentration under low P, and (ii) greater APase activity in both the roots and nodules under low P. These findings suggest that V. divaricata is well adapted to acquire N under P deficiency, owing to the plasticity of its nodule physiology  相似文献   

2.
Symbiotic N2 fixation is one of the main processes that introduces N into terrestrial ecosystems. As such, it may be crucial for the sequestration of the extra C available in a world of continuously increasing atmospheric CO2 partial pressure (pCO2). The effect of elevated pCO2 (60 Pa) on symbiotic N2 fixation (15N-isotope dilution method) was investigated using Free-Air-CO2-Enrichment technology over a period of 3 years. Trifolium repens was cultivated either alone or together with Lolium perenne (a nonfixing reference crop) in mixed swards. Two different N fertilization levels and defoliation frequencies were applied. The total N yield increased consistently and the percentage of plant N derived from symbiotic N2 fixation increased significantly in T. repens under elevated pCO2. All additionally assimilated N was derived from symbiotic N2 fixation, not from the soil. In the mixtures exposed to elevated pCO2, an increased amount of symbiotically fixed N (+7.8, 8.2, and 6.2 g m-2 a-1 in 1993, 1994, and 1995, respectively) was introduced into the system. Increased N2 fixation is a competitive advantage for T. repens in mixed swards with pasture grasses and may be a crucial factor in maintaining the C:N ratio in the ecosystem as a whole.  相似文献   

3.
Changes in growth, symbiotic nitrogen fixation (SNF), acid phosphatase (ACP), and phytase activities to phosphorus availability (15 and 60 μmol KH2PO4 plant−1 week−1) were compared in two recombinant lines (115 and 147) of common bean. Plant growth, nodulation and SNF were genotype and P level-dependent. 147 was more affected by P shortage (15 μmol P) than 115. Four ACP types were revealed in the nodules of both lines, ACP1 exhibiting a higher specific activity under P shortage as compared to the 60 μmol P treatment, especially in 115. A single phytase was revealed for the nodules of both lines and was significantly enhanced by P deficiency. Three ACP types were found in roots and leaves, showing increasing activity under P deficiency, especially in 115. Regardless of P supply, leaf ACP specific activity was higher than that of nodules and roots in the both lines. Interestingly, phosphorus use efficiency for N2 fixation significantly correlated to nodule ACP activity under P shortage in the both lines. The relatively better performance of 115 as compared to 147 under P deficiency could be partly ascribed to the ability of 115 to maintain higher ACP activity. This enzyme might be involved in the remobilization of the plant Pi and its utilization for SNF.  相似文献   

4.
Qin L  Zhao J  Tian J  Chen L  Sun Z  Guo Y  Lu X  Gu M  Xu G  Liao H 《Plant physiology》2012,159(4):1634-1643
Legume biological nitrogen (N) fixation is the most important N source in agroecosystems, but it is also a process requiring a considerable amount of phosphorus (P). Therefore, developing legume varieties with effective N(2) fixation under P-limited conditions could have profound significance for improving agricultural sustainability. We show here that inoculation with effective rhizobial strains enhanced soybean (Glycine max) N(2) fixation and P nutrition in the field as well as in hydroponics. Furthermore, we identified and characterized a nodule high-affinity phosphate (Pi) transporter gene, GmPT5, whose expression was elevated in response to low P. Yeast heterologous expression verified that GmPT5 was indeed a high-affinity Pi transporter. Localization of GmPT5 expression based on β-glucuronidase staining in soybean composite plants with transgenic roots and nodules showed that GmPT5 expression occurred principally in the junction area between roots and young nodules and in the nodule vascular bundles for juvenile and mature nodules, implying that GmPT5 might function in transporting Pi from the root vascular system into nodules. Overexpression or knockdown of GmPT5 in transgenic composite soybean plants altered nodulation and plant growth performance, which was partially dependent on P supply. Through both in situ and in vitro (33)P uptake assays using transgenic soybean roots and nodules, we demonstrated that GmPT5 mainly functions in transporting Pi from roots to nodules, especially under P-limited conditions. We conclude that the high-affinity Pi transporter, GmPT5, controls Pi entry from roots to nodules, is critical for maintaining Pi homeostasis in nodules, and subsequently regulates soybean nodulation and growth performance.  相似文献   

5.
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7.
Drought stress is one of the major factors affecting nitrogen fixation by legume-rhizobium symbiosis. Several mechanisms have been previously reported to be involved in the physiological response of symbiotic nitrogen fixation to drought stress, i.e. carbon shortage and nodule carbon metabolism, oxygen limitation, and feedback regulation by the accumulation of N fixation products. The carbon shortage hypothesis was previously investigated by studying the combined effects of CO2 enrichment and water deficits on nodulation and N2 fixation in soybean. Under drought, in a genotype with drought tolerant N2 fixation, approximately four times the amount of 14C was allocated to nodules compared to a drought sensitive genotype. It was found that an important effect of CO2 enrichment of soybean under drought was an enhancement of photo assimilation, an increased partitioning of carbon to nodules, whose main effect was to sustain nodule growth, which helped sustain N2 rates under soil water deficits. The interaction of nodule permeability to O2 and drought stress with N2 fixation was examined in soybean nodules and led to the overall conclusion that O2 limitation seems to be involved only in the initial stages of water deficit stresses in decreasing nodule activity. The involvement of ureides in the drought response of N2 fixation was initially suspected by an increased ureide concentration in shoots and nodules under drought leading to a negative feedback response between ureides and nodule activity. Direct evidence for inhibition of nitrogenase activity by its products, ureides and amides, supported this hypothesis. The overall conclusion was that all three physiological mechanisms are important in understanding the regulation of N2 fixation and its response of to soil drying.  相似文献   

8.
Symbiotic nitrogen (N2) fixation in legumes may give the host plant a distinct competitive advantage; at the same time it is mainly responsible for introducing N into terrestrial ecosystems which may ultimately benefit all organisms. Depending on environmental conditions, symbiotic N2 fixation may be tuned to the plant's N demand or specifically inhibited (a disadvantage for plants which depend mainly on symbiotic N2 fixation), or even prevented. Thus, the ecological range for symbiotic N2 fixation can be narrower than that of the host plants. A shortage of mineral N is the only case in which adverse environmental conditions clearly favour symbiotic N2 fixation. Variations in number or mass of nodules or nodule morphology are persistent features, that may represent one kind of regulation of N2 fixation. In addition, varying O2 permeability of nodules functions as a rapid and reversible control of N2 fixation which may compensate partially or fully for poor nodulation. The plant's demand for symbiotically fixed N is thought to play a central role in modulating both nodulation and N2 fixation activity; an N feedback mechanism is assumed. The control of symbiotic N2 fixation operates through a series of ecophysiological triggers which are also influenced by complex interactions between legume plants and other organisms in the ecosystem. The proportion of legume biomass and the performance of symbiotic N2 fixation in each individual legume are the main parameters which determine the amount of symbiotically fixed N introduced into a terrestrial ecosystem. The various triggers and N feedback mechanisms from the whole ecosystem to the gene expression level which regulate symbiotic N2 fixation in terrestrial ecosystems are reviewed and discussed in terms of a conceptual model. Although the presented model is based primarily on our knowledge about the physiology of a few leguminous crop species and of ecosystem processes in managed, perennial grassland in temperate climatic conditions, it may stimulate thinking about functional relationships between symbiotic N2 fixation and terrestrial ecosystems at various system levels.  相似文献   

9.
The common-bean often faces phosphorus deficiency in soils where it is grown. Such a deficiency is a major limitation to yield improvement, especially as the common-bean depends upon nitrogen fixation. Screening for symbiotic nitrogen fixation under phosphorus deficiency was performed with 33 common-bean accessions representing the diversity of 15 European market classes from the Iberian Peninsula. These accessions were inoculated withRhizobium tropici CIAT899 and grown in an aerated nitrogen-free nutrient solution at deficientversus sufficient phosphorous supplies (75 vs. 250 μmol plan−1 week−1) in a glasshouse. A large variability in N2-dependent growth under P deficiency was found with most tolerance to P deficiency among late type IV Andean landraces, with the exception of 3 early type I Andean landraces. From this screening four contrasting landraces were selected for their high efficiency in the use of P for their symbiotic N nutrition, and compared with the cultivar Linex in fields of a reference production area over 3 years. The landraces from the Iberian Peninsula expressed a higher growth than the cultivar Linex, although they showed a lower nodulation. We hypothesize that the identified P tolerance among Iberian Peninsula accessions may be useful for improving symbiotic nitrogen fixation in the common-bean when growth is limited by available soil-P and could contribute to sustainable farming systems by reducing farmers’ dependence on fertilizers.  相似文献   

10.
The effects were studied of both nitrogen and phosphorus limitation and irradiance on the performance and operation of photosynthesis in tomato leaves (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.). Plants were grown at low N, high N, low P or high P supply and at two irradiances. Using mature leaves, measurements were made of the irradiance dependencies of the relative quantum efficiencies of photosystems I and II, and of the rate of carbon dioxide fixation. Measurements were also made of foliar starch and chlorophyll concentrations. The results showed that photosynthetic light-harvesting and electron-transport activity acclimate to nutrient stress and growth irradiance such that the internal relationships between electron transport by photosystems I and II do not change; the linear relationship between PhiPSII, and PhiPSI was not affected. It was also evident that under N stress photosynthesis was reduced by a decreased light absorption and by the decreased utilization of assimilates, while P stress mainly affected the carboxylation capacity. Under N stress foliar starch levels increased and the oxygen sensitivity of CO2 fixation decreased, whereas P stress resulted in decreased starch levels and increased oxygen sensitivity of CO2 fixation. The relationship between starch accumulation and oxygen sensitivity (increased starch correlated with decreased oxygen sensitivity) was always the same across the nutrient treatments. These results are consistent with N deprivation producing an increasing limitation of photosynthesis, possibly by feedback from the leaf carbohydrate pool, whereas, although P deprivation produces a decreased rate of CO2 fixation, this is accompanied by a increase in oxygen sensitivity, suggesting that feedback limitation is decreased under P stress.  相似文献   

11.
The influence of P on N2 fixation and dry matter production of young pea ( Pisum sativum L. cv. Bodil) plants grown in a soil-sand mixture was investigated in growth cabinet experiments. Nodule dry weight, specific C2H2 reduction and P concentration in shoots responded to P addition before any growth response could be observed. The P concentration in nodules responded only slightly to P addition. A supply of P to P-deficient plants increased both the nodule dry weight, specific C2H2 reduction and P concentration in shoots relatively faster than it increased shoot dry weight and P concentration in nodules. Combined N applied to plants when N2 fixation had commenced, increased shoot dry weight only at the highest P levels. This indicates that the smaller plant growth at the low P levels did not result from N deficiency. The reduced nodulation and N2 fixation in P-deficient plants seem to be caused by impaired shoot metabolism and not by a direct effect of P deficiency of the nodules.  相似文献   

12.
The limitation of symbiotic nitrogen fixation due to P deficiency restricts the development of a sustainable agriculture, particularly in Mediterrancan and tropical soils. Common bean genotypes, APN18, BAT271, PVA846, POT51, G2633 and G12168, were grown in an aerated N-free nutrient solution at low (72 μmol plant-1 week-1) and control P supplies (360 μmol plant-1 week-1). Nitrogenase activity was estimated by in situ measurements of acetylene reduction activity (ARA) in a flow-through system. During the assays, maximum values of ARA (peak ARA) were reached between 20 and 30 min after exposure to C2H2, depending on P treatment and growth stage. Thereafter, a decline in C2H4 evolution was observed. This decline was most pronounced in low-P plants and there was a significant genotypic effect. ARA per plant was decreased by P deficiency, mostly because nodulation was delayed and the number and mass of nodules were reduced. The ARA decrease during pod filling was also activated by P deficiency. ARA per g dry weight nodule was increased by P deficiency in G2633 and G12168, unchanged in APN18, BAT271 and POT51 and decreased in PVA846. Except for the climbing type IV G2633, total N at harvest for all P treatments was correlated with the cumulative value of peak ARA and with peak ARA at early pod-filling which was the highest peak ARA throughout the growth cycle of type III bushy genotypes. We conclude that if phenology and growth habit are carefully considered, peak ARA is a reliable screen of genotypes for N2 fixation tolerance to P deficiency. Selection of lines with early nodulation under P deficiency is also advisable, and the effect of P deficiency on the nodule functioning needs to be considered.  相似文献   

13.
In calcareous soils, the yield of grain legumes is often limited by the lower availability of iron (Fe), especially when they depend upon symbiosis with root nodule bacteria for their N nutrition. In order to explore the variability of responses of N(2)-fixing common bean to Fe deficiency the common bean white-seeded lines Striker and Coco blanc, and coloured-seeded lines SVM-29-21 and ARA14 were inoculated with Rhizobium tropici (CIAT 899) and cultivated hydroaeroponically with a N-free nutrient solution supplied or not with 45microM Fe. Differences among lines were observed: Fe-deficiency-induced-chlorosis on young leaves was earlier and more severe in some lines than others. Nodule development and N(2)-fixing capacity was less affected in line ARA14 which preferentially allocated Fe towards nodules. Results suggest that Fe use efficiency for symbiotic nitrogen fixation (FeUE SNF) could be used to screen tolerant bean lines to Fe deficiency in condition of symbiotic nitrogen fixation.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Experiments were done to test whether N fixation is more sensitive to high soil temperatures in common bean than in cowpea or soybean. Greenhouse experiments compared nodulation, nitrogenase activity, growth and nitrogen accumulation of several host/strain combinations of common bean with the other grain legumes and with N-fertilization, at various root temperatures. Field experiments compared relative N-accumulation (in symbiotic relative to N-fertilized plants) of common bean with cowpea under different soil thermal regimes. N-fertilized beans were unaffected by the higher temperatures, but nitrogen accumulation by symbiotic beans was always more sensitive to high root temperatures (33°C, 33/28°C, 34/28°C compared with 28°C) than were cowpea and soybean symbiosis. Healthy bean nodules that had developed at low temperatures functioned normally in acetylene reduction tests done at 35°C. High temperatures caused little or no suppression of nodule number. However, bean nodules produced at high temperatures were small and had low specific activity. ForP. vulgaris some tolerance to high temperature was observed among rhizobium strains (e.g., CIAT 899 was tolerant) but not among host cultivars. Heat tolerance ofP. acutifolius andP. lunatus symbioses was similar to that of cowpea and soybean. In the field, high surface soil temperatures did not reduce N accumulation in symbiotic beans more than in cowpea, probably because of compensatory nodulation in the deeper and cooler parts of the soil.  相似文献   

15.
Characterization of nodule growth and function, phosphorus and nitrogen status of plant tissues and host-plant growth of nodulated soybean ( Glycine max L. Merr.) plants developing and recovering from phosphorus deficiency was used to evaluate the role of phosphorus in symbiotic dinitrogen fixation. The sequence of physiological responses during recovery from phosphorus deficiency was; (1) rapid uptake of phosphorus, (2) rapid increases in the phosphorus concentration of leaves and nodules, (3) enhanced growth and function of nodules, (4) increased nitrogen concentrations in all plant organs and (5) enhanced plant growth. The sequence of physiological responses to onset of phosphorus deficiency was; (1) decreased phosphorus uptake, (2) decreased phosphorus concentrations in leaves and nodules, (3) decreased nodule function, (4) decreased nitrogen concentration in plant organs and (5) decreased plant growth. These results, in conjunction with previously published data (Sa and Israel, Plant Physiol. 97: 928–935, 1991), support an interpretation that the total response of symbiotic dinitrogen fixation in soybean plants to altered phosphorus supply is a function of both indirect effects on host-plant growth and more direct effects on the metabolic function of nodules.  相似文献   

16.
With the ability to symbiotically fix atmospheric N2, legumes may lack the N-limitations thought to constrain plant response to elevated concentrations of atmospheric CO2. The growth and photosynthetic responses of two perennial grassland species were compared to test the hypotheses that (1) the CO2 response of wild species is limited at low N availability, (2) legumes respond to a greater extent than non-fixing forbs to elevated CO2, and (3) elevated CO2 stimulates symbiotic N2 fixation, resulting in an increased amount of N derived from the atmosphere. This study investigated the effects of atmospheric CO2 concentration (365 and 700 mol mol–1) and N addition on whole plant growth and C and N acquisition in an N2-fixing legume (Lupinus perennis) and a non-fixing forb (Achillea millefolium) in controlled-chamber environments. To evaluate the effects of a wide range of N availability on the CO2 response, we incorporated six levels of soil N addition starting with native field soil inherently low in N (field soil + 0, 4, 8, 12, 16, or 20 g N m–2 yr–1). Whole plant growth, leaf net photosynthetic rates (A), and the proportion of N derived from N2 fixation were determined in plants grown from seed over one growing season. Both species increased growth with CO2enrichment, but this response was mediated by N supply only for the non-fixer, Achillea. Its response depended on mineral N supply as growth enhancements under elevated CO2 increased from 0% in low N soil to +25% at the higher levels of N addition. In contrast, Lupinus plants had 80% greater biomass under elevated CO2 regardless of N treatment. Although partial photosynthetic acclimation to CO2 enrichment occurred, both species maintained comparably higher A in elevated compared to ambient CO2 (+38%). N addition facilitated increased A in Achillea, however, in neither species did additional N availability affect the acclimation response of A to CO2. Elevated CO2 increased plant total N yield by 57% in Lupinus but had no effect on Achillea. The increased N in Lupinus came from symbiotic N2 fixation, which resulted in a 47% greater proportion of N derived from fixation relative to other sources of N. These results suggest that compared to non-fixing forbs, N2-fixers exhibit positive photosynthetic and growth responses to increased atmospheric CO2 that are independent of soil N supply. The enhanced amount of N derived from N2 fixation under elevated CO2 presumably helps meet the increased N demand in N2-fixing species. This response may lead to modified roles of N2-fixers and N2-fixer/non-fixer species interactions in grassland communities, especially those that are inherently N-poor, under projected rising atmospheric CO2.  相似文献   

17.
Changes in nodule growth and activity and in the concentrations of soluble N compounds in nodules, leaves and xylem sap under conditions of altered N nutrition in the actinorhizal plant Myrica gale L. are reported. Altering the N nutrition of symbiotic plants may alter the internal regulation of combined N which in turn may regulate nodule growth and activity. Flushing nodules daily with 100% O2 caused a decline in amide concentration and an increase in nodule growth although plants had recovered some nitrogenase activity within 4 h of exposure to O2. Samples of nodules, leaves and xylem sap were derivatized and amino acids identified and quantified using either reverse phase high performance liquid chromatography or gas chromatography-mass spectrometry in single ion monitoring mode. The ratio of asparagine in the nodules to that in the xylem was much higher in plants fed N (6.7 for NH+4-fed and 8.3 for NO3-fed plants) than for N2-fixing plants (2.5). Significant amounts of 15N added as 15NH+4 or 15NO3 accumulated in nodules following accumulation in the shoot which is consistent with the translocation of N to the nodules via the phloem. The uptake of 15NH+4 led to the synthesis and subsequent translocation of glutamine in the xylem sap. These results are discussed in terms of the feedback mechanisms that may regulate nitrogen fixation in Myrica root nodules.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Mutagenesis provoked by exposure at elevated temperature of the cold-adapted, arctic Rhizobium strain N31 resulted in the generation of five deletion mutants, which exhibited loss of their smaller plasmid (200 kb), whereas the larger plasmid (> 500 kb) was still present in all mutants. Deletion mutants did not show differences from the wild type in the antibiotic resistance pattern, the carbohydrates and organic acids utilization, and the growth rate at low temperature. However, deletion mutants differed from the wild type and among themselves in the ex planta nitrogenase activity, the nodulation index, and the symbiotic effectiveness. The deletion mutant N31.6rif r showed higher nodulation index and exhibited higher nitrogenase activity and symbiotic efficiency than the other deletion mutants and the wild type. The process of deletion mutation resulted in the improvement of an arctic Rhizobium strain having an earlier and higher symbiotic nitrogen fixation efficiency than the wild type.  相似文献   

19.
To elucidate the mechanism of adaptation of leguminous plants to iron (Fe)‐deficient environment, comprehensive analyses of soybean (Glycine max) plants (sampled at anthesis) were conducted under Fe‐sufficient control and Fe‐deficient treatment using metabolomic and physiological approach. Our results show that soybeans grown under Fe‐deficient conditions showed lower nitrogen (N) fixation efficiency; however, ureides increased in different tissues, indicating potential N‐feedback inhibition. N assimilation was inhibited as observed in the repressed amino acids biosynthesis and reduced proteins in roots and nodules. In Fe‐deficient leaves, many amino acids increased, accompanied by the reduction of malate, fumarate, succinate, and α‐ketoglutarate, which implies the N reprogramming was stimulated by the anaplerotic pathway. Accordingly, many organic acids increased in roots and nodules; however, enzymes involved in the related metabolic pathway (e.g., Krebs cycle) showed opposite activity between roots and nodules, indicative of different mechanisms. Sugars increased or maintained at constant level in different tissues under Fe deficiency, which probably relates to oxidative stress, cell wall damage, and feedback regulation. Increased ascorbate, nicotinate, raffinose, galactinol, and proline in different tissues possibly helped resist the oxidative stress induced by Fe deficiency. Overall, Fe deficiency induced the coordinated metabolic reprogramming in different tissues of symbiotic soybean plants.  相似文献   

20.
A greenhouse experiment was carried out aiming to study the effect of iron deficiency on nitrogen fixation and ammonium assimilation in common bean nodules. Host-plant and nodule growth, symbiotic nitrogen fixation, glutamine synthetase (GS) and glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) were analyzed in two common bean varieties subjected to iron deficiency. Results showed that host-plant and nodules growth, nitrogen fixation and GS activity decreased when under Fe-deficiency against an important increase of ammonium accumulation and GDH activity. Tolerant variety Flamingo is clearly less affected by iron deficiency than the sensitive one, Coco blanc. The allocation of iron to nodules and Fe use-efficiency for nodule growth and symbiotic nitrogen fixation were on the basis of the symbiotic performance of Flamingo under iron deprivation. Under Fe-deficiency, GDH take over GS the ammonium assimilation activity, particularly in the tolerant variety.  相似文献   

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