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1.
The effects of the phytohormone abscisic acid (ABA) on plant growth and root nodule formation were analyzed in Trifolium repense (white clover) and Lotus japonicus, which form indeterminate and determinate nodules, respectively. In T. repense, although the number of nodules formed after inoculation with Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii strain 4S (wild type) was slightly affected by exogenous ABA, those formed by strain H1(pC4S8), which forms ineffective nodules, were dramatically reduced 28 days after inoculation (DAI). At 14 and 21 DAI, the number of nodules formed with the wild-type strain was decreased by exogenous ABA. In L. japonicus, the number of nodules was also reduced by ABA treatment. Thus, exogenous ABA inhibits root nodule formation after inoculation with rhizobia. Observation of root hair deformation revealed that ABA blocked the step between root hair swelling and curling. When the ABA concentration in plants was decreased by using abamine, a specific inhibitor of 9-cis-epoxycarotenoid dioxygenase, the number of nodules on lateral roots of abamine-treated L. japonicus increased dramatically, indicating that lower-than-normal concentrations of endogenous ABA enhance nodule formation. We hypothesize that the ABA concentration controls the number of root nodules.  相似文献   

2.
H. H. Zahran  J. I. Sprent 《Planta》1986,167(3):303-309
The effects of sodium chloride and polyethylene glycol (PEG) on the interaction between Rhizobium leguminosarum strain 29d and root hairs of field bean (Vicia faba L. cv. Maris Bead) plants were investigated. Two levels each of NaCl (50 and 100 mol·m–3) and PEG (100 and 200 mol·m–3) were given at the time of root-hair formation. Scanning electron microscopy showed rhizobial attachment and colonization on root-hair tips. Adhesion of rhizobia in both lateral and polar orientation, sometimes associated with microfibrils, occurred mainly in crooks at the root-hair tips; most of the infections also occurred here. Bacterial colonization and root-hair curling were both reduced by stress treatments. Polyethylene glycol but not NaCl significantly reduced root-hair diameter. The proportion of root hairs containing infection threads was reduced by 30% under NaCl and by 52% under PEG. The structure of some of the root hairs, epidermal and hypodermal cells, as seen by light microscopy in ultrasections, was distorted as a result of NaCl and PEG treatments; cells showed plasmolysis and folded membranes. After three weeks of treatment, both NaCl and PEG inhibited nodule number by about 50% and nodule weight by more than 60%. It is concluded that the root-hair infection process in Vicia faba is impaired by NaCl and PEG treatments and this in turn results in fewer nodules being produced.Abbreviation PEG polyethylene glycol  相似文献   

3.
Pseudomonas putida strain A313, a deleterious rhizosphere bacterium, reduced pea nitrogen content when inoculated alone or in combination with Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viceae on plants in the presence of soil under greenhouse conditions. When plants were grown gnotobiotically in liquid media, mixed inocula of A313 and rhizobia gave a higher proportion of small evenly distributed nodules when compared with a single rhizobial inoculation. In addition, the rhizobial root establishment was reduced by A313 irrespective of inoculum density, indicating that A313 has the capacity to interact with the early rhizobial infection process. When pea seedlings were simultaneously inoculated with A313 and rhizobia, A313 colonised the root hairs to the same extent as the rhizobia, according to analysis by immunofluorescence microscopy. This suggests that the root hair colonisation trait of P. putida interferes with the onset of the symbiotic process.  相似文献   

4.
The formation of nitrogen-fixing no dules on legume roots requires the coordination of infection by rhizobia at the root epidermis with the initiation of cell divisions in the root cortex. During infection, rhizobia attach to the tip of elongating root hairs which then curl to entrap the rhizobia. However, the mechanism of root hair deformation and curling in response to symbiotic signals is still elusive. Here, we found that small GTPases (MtRac1/MtROP9 and its homologs) are required for root hair development and rhizobial infection in Medicago truncatula. Our results show that the Nod factor receptor LYK3 phosphorylates the guanine nucleotide exchange factor MtRopGEF2 at S73 which is critical for the polar growth of root hairs. In turn, phosphorylated MtRopGEF2 can activate MtRac1. Activated MtRac1 was found to localize at the tips of root hairs and to strongly interact with LYK3 and NFP. Taken together, our results support the hypothesis that MtRac1, LYK3, and NFP form a polarly localized receptor complex that regulates root hair deformation during rhizobial infection.  相似文献   

5.
利用光学和电子显微镜对紫云英根瘤菌菌株109和广宿主的快生型根瘤菌菌株NGR234感染温带型豆科植物紫云英进行了研究,结果表明根瘤菌感染紫云英是通过在根毛中形成侵染线的途径。电子显微镜研究揭示了固氮根瘤中细胞内侵染线的存在。接种二天后,首先可观察到根毛的卷曲或分枝。接种四至五天后,在每株植物卷曲的根毛中可看到侵染线。接种八至十天后的植株出现肉眼可见的根瘤。菌株NGR234能够在紫云英上诱导根毛的卷曲,侵染线和根瘤的形成,但所形成的根瘤却未能固氮,根瘤中无明显的类菌体区,但有少数包有细菌的侵染线。NGR234抗抗菌素的衍生菌均未能使紫云英结瘤。将NGR234的共生质粒转移至三叶草、苜蓿、豌豆、快生型大豆根瘤菌和农杆菌,亦未能使这些细菌获得紫云英上结瘤的能力。  相似文献   

6.
To analyse nodular antioxidant enzyme expression in response to salt stress, Phaseolus vulgaris genotype BAT477 was inoculated with reference strain CIAT899, and treated with 50 mM NaCl. Plant growth, nodulation and nitrogen fixing activity were analysed. Results showed that: (1) all parameters, particularly in nodules, were affected by salt treatments, and (2) confirmed preferential growth allocation to roots. The ARA was significantly decreased by salt treatments. Protein dosage confirmed that nodules were more affected by salt treatment than were roots. We analysed superoxide dismutase, catalase, ascorbate peroxidase and peroxidase in nodules, roots and a free rhizobial strain. Our results indicated that SOD and CAT nodular isozymes had bacterial and root origins. The SOD expressed the same CuZn, Fe and Mn SOD isoforms in nodules and roots, whereas in free rhizobia we found only one Fe and Mn SOD. APX and POX nodule and root profiles had only root origins, as no rhizobial band was detected. Under salt stress, plant growth, nitrogen fixation and activities of antioxidant defense enzymes in nodules were affected. Thus, these enzymes appear to preserve symbiosis from stress turned out that NaCl salinity lead to a differential regulation of distinct SOD and POX isoenzyme. So their levels in nodules appeared to be consistent with a symbiotic nitrogen fixing efficiency hypothesis, and they seem to function as the molecular mechanisms underlying the nodule response to salinity.  相似文献   

7.
In the symbiotic interaction with rhizobia, legumes develop nodules in which nitrogen fixation takes place. Upon submersion, most temperate legumes are incapable of nodulation, but tropical legumes that grow in waterlogged soils have acquired water stress tolerance for growth and nodulation. One well-studied model plant, the tropical, semi-aquatic Sesbania rostrata, develops stem-located adventitious root primordia that grow out into adventitious roots upon submergence and develop into stem nodules after inoculation with the microsymbiont, Azorhizobium caulinodans. Sesbania rostrata also has a nodulated underground root system. On well-aerated roots, nodules form via root hair curling infection in the zone, just above the root tip, where root hairs develop; on hydroponic roots, an alternative process is used, recruiting a cortical intercellular invasion program at the lateral root bases that skips the epidermal responses. This intercellular cortical invasion entails infection pocket formation, a process that involves cell death features and reactive oxygen species. The plant hormones ethylene and gibberellin are the major signals that act downstream from the bacterial nodulation factors in the nodulation and invasion program. Both hormones block root hair curling infection, but cooperate to stimulate lateral root base invasion and play a role in infection thread formation, meristem establishment, and differentiation of meristem descendants.  相似文献   

8.
The soil bacterium Rhizobium infects its leguminous host plants in temperate regions of the world mostly by way of the growing root hairs. Root hair curling is a prerequisite for root hair infection, although sidelong root hair infections occasionally have been observed. The processes underlying Rhizobium -induced root hair curling are unknown.
Computer simulation of root hair growth indicates that one-sided tip growth inhibition by Rhizobium can result in root hair curling when three conditions are simultaneously fulfilled: 1) rhizobial growth inhibition is strong enough to prevent removal out of the tip growth range: 2) root hair surface growth between the attached Rhizobium and the root hair top is inhibited; 3) rhizobial growth inhibition is limited to one side of the root hair.
The results predict that root hair curling by stimulation of tip growth is improbable. This study accentuates the need for information about the growth processes contributing to tip growth in leguminous root hairs.  相似文献   

9.
The survival of Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar phaseoli on seeds of bean was tested, using the cultivar Carioca. The seeds were treated seven days before inoculation with Benlate, Vitavax, Banrot, Difolatan or Ridomil fungicides. The rhizobial strains used were: CIAT 899, CPAC 1135 and CIAT 652. Strain CIAT 899 showed greater survival on the seed with fungicide than the other strains. Two hours after the contact with fungicides strains CIAT 652 and CPAC 1135 had significantly lower numbers of rhizobia than the treatment without fungicide. The Benlate and Banrot fungicides had the greatest effect on survival of rhizobial strains. There was a drastic mortality of the two strains, CIAT 652 and CPAC 1135, on seeds treated with Benlate and Ridomil. Under field conditions, granular inoculation produced fewer nodules, but a similar total nodule weight as seed inoculation. Serological tests (ELISA) showed that seed treatment with Benlate in connection with seed inoculation reduced drastically the occurrence of inoculated strains in nodules, while the same fungicide treatment and inoculation applied in the seed furrow did not affect the survival of the inoculated strain.  相似文献   

10.
Nine cultivars of common bean were grown in the presence of a natural microflora without exogenous rhizobial inoculation. Nodules were harvested 30 days post planting (early flowering stage) and the presence of trehalose determined. Amounts present varied according to cultivar and were between 0.20 and 1.63 mg g−1 nodule dry weight. Rhizobial strains were isolated from the nodules of three selected cultivars (Canario 101, Flor de Mayo Bajio and Flor de Mayo 38). Trehalose levels in nodules produced after either mixed strain reinfection, or after axenic homologous reinfection or after axenic cross‐reinfection could be manipulated by applying drought stress. Mixed reinfection nodules from stressed plants accumulated between two and six times the trehalose concentration found in non‐stressed control plants. After axenic cross‐reinfection up to 48‐fold increases in nodule trehalose content were recorded during drought stress. Those cultivars exhibiting high nodule trehalose levels and/or a high degree of trehalose stimulation in response to drought stress also exhibited a high leaf relative water content and were also the most drought resistant. During drought stress nodule trehalase levels rose only slightly.  相似文献   

11.
The complex interactions that occur in systems with more than one type of symbiosis were studied using one isolate of Bradyrhizobium sp. and the ectomycorrhizal fungus Pisolithus tinctorius (Pers.) Coker and Couch inoculated on to the roots of Acacia holosericea A. Cunn. ex G. Don in vitro. After a single inoculation with Bradyrhizobium sp., bacteria typically entered the roots by forming infection threads in the root hair cells via the curling point of the root hair and/ or after intercellular penetration. Sheath formation and intercellular penetration were observed on Acacia roots after a single inoculation with Pisolithus tinctorius but no radial elongation of epidermal cells. Simultaneous inoculation with both microorganisms resulted in nodules and ectomycorrhiza on the root system, occasionally on the same lateral root. On lateral roots bearing nodules and ectomycorrhiza, the nodulation site was characterized by the presence of a nodule meristem and the absence of an infection thread; sheath formation and Hartig net development occurred regularly in the region of the roots adjacent to nodules. Prior inoculation with Bradyrhizobium sp. did not inhibit ectomycorrhizal colonization in root segments adjacent to nodules in which nodule meristems and infection threads were clearly present. Conversely, in ectomycorrhizae inoculated by bacteria, the nodule meristem and the infection thread were typically absent. These results show that simultaneous inoculation with both microorganisms inhibits infection thread development, thus conferring an advantage on fungal hyphae in the competition for infection sites. This suggests that fungal hyphae can modify directly and/or indirectly the recognition factors leading to nodule meristem initiation and infection thread development.  相似文献   

12.
Limited soil water availability is a major threat to agricultural productivity because it inhibits plant growth and yields. Various strategies have been adopted to mitigate water deficit stress in plants; however, using extremophilic microbes with plant growth promoting traits could be an environmentally friendly and cost-effective approach to improve crop stress resilience. Rhizobia are well known for their symbiotic association with legumes, but they can also improve the fitness of non-legumes under stressed conditions. Thus, different rhizobial strains were isolated from nodules of two legumes (lentil and chickpea) and tested for osmoadaptation at four different polyethylene glycol (PEG-6000) levels, i.e., ? 0.05, ? 0.65, ? 1.57, and ? 2.17 MPa. Two stress-tolerant rhizobial strains, SRL5 and SRC8, were selected to evaluate their potential to induce tolerance against water deficits in wheat grown at four different percentages of field capacity (FC; 40, 60, 80, and 100%). Rhizobial inoculation improved physiological parameters and growth of wheat under water deficit; however, co-inoculation of selected rhizobia was better than sole application. Grain yield was most limited at the highest level of water deficit but sole inoculation with SRC8 and SRL5 improved yield by 24% and 19%, respectively. Combined inoculation increased grain yield by up to 48% compared to the uninoculated control. Thus, rhizobia from different legumes possess enormous potential for improving the resilience of cereals (non-legumes) to water deficit stress. Moreover, co-inoculation of rhizobia could be more beneficial than their sole application.  相似文献   

13.
Bacteria belonging to the genera Rhizobium, Mesorhizobium, Sinorhizobium, Bradyrhizobium, and Azorhizobium (collectively referred to as rhizobia) grow in the soil as free-living organisms but can also live as nitrogen-fixing symbionts inside root nodule cells of legume plants. The interactions between several rhizobial species and their host plants have become models for this type of nitrogen-fixing symbiosis. Temperate legumes such as alfalfa, pea, and vetch form indeterminate nodules that arise from root inner and middle cortical cells and grow out from the root via a persistent meristem. During the formation of functional indeterminate nodules, symbiotic bacteria must gain access to the interior of the host root. To get from the outside to the inside, rhizobia grow and divide in tubules called infection threads, which are composite structures derived from the two symbiotic partners. This review focuses on symbiotic infection and invasion during the formation of indeterminate nodules. It summarizes root hair growth, how root hair growth is influenced by rhizobial signaling molecules, infection of root hairs, infection thread extension down root hairs, infection thread growth into root tissue, and the plant and bacterial contributions necessary for infection thread formation and growth. The review also summarizes recent advances concerning the growth dynamics of rhizobial populations in infection threads.  相似文献   

14.
The symbiotic association between legumes and nitrogen-fixing bacteria collectively known as rhizobia results in the formation of a unique plant root organ called the nodule. This process is initiated following the perception of rhizobial nodulation factors by the host plant. Nod factor (NF)-stimulated plant responses, including nodulation-specific gene expression, is mediated by the NF signaling pathway. Plant mutants in this pathway are unable to nodulate. We describe here the cloning and characterization of two mutant alleles of the Medicago truncatula ortholog of the Lotus japonicus and pea (Pisum sativum) NIN gene. The Mtnin mutants undergo excessive root hair curling but are impaired in infection and fail to form nodules following inoculation with Sinorhizobium meliloti. Our investigation of early NF-induced gene expression using the reporter fusion ENOD11::GUS in the Mtnin-1 mutant demonstrates that MtNIN is not essential for early NF signaling but may negatively regulate the spatial pattern of ENOD11 expression. It was recently shown that an autoactive form of a nodulation-specific calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase is sufficient to induce nodule organogenesis in the absence of rhizobia. We show here that MtNIN is essential for autoactive calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase-induced nodule organogenesis. The non-nodulating hcl mutant has a similar phenotype to Mtnin, but we demonstrate that HCL is not required in this process. Based on our data, we suggest that MtNIN functions downstream of the early NF signaling pathway to coordinate and regulate the correct temporal and spatial formation of root nodules.  相似文献   

15.
We have investigated the effect on growth of fertilisation versus biological nitrogen fixation by rhizobial nodules in Retama sphaerocarpa(L.) Boiss, a leafless leguminous shrub native to the Iberian Peninsula and North-West Africa that has generated interest for revegation of dry Mediterranean habitats. Our main objective was to optimise the formation of root nodules under nursery conditions and to evaluate their influence on the first year of seedling growth in comparison with standard fertilisation. Seedlings of R. sphaerocarpa from two Spanish localities were grown under two levels of fertilisation, and half of each were inoculated with rhizobia isolated from adult Retama, Cytisus and Adenocarpusplants in the field. Although some promiscuity was observed, nodulation was significantly successful with specific rhizobia. At the end of the experiment, highly fertilised plants were taller and heavier and exhibited larger photosynthetic rates than either nodulated or non-nodulated plants under low fertilisation. High fertilisation enhanced seedling growth but inhibited both the nodulation and the nitrogenase activity of the nodules. Thus, physiological differences between nodulated and non-nodulated plants were observed in the low but not in the high fertilisation treatment. Nitrogen uptake and use was enhanced by root nodules, which translated into enhanced photosynthesis and growth. Since inoculation is simple, environmentally friendly and cheap, and nodulated plants are more likely to overcome transplant stress than non-nodulated ones, our results suggest that inoculation together with low, background fertilisation (instead of high fertilisation) should be used when producing high quality seedlings of this autochthonous Mediterranean shrub.  相似文献   

16.

Background  

Associated with appropriate crop and soil management, inoculation of legumes with microbial biofertilizers can improve food legume yield and soil fertility and reduce pollution by inorganic fertilizers. Rhizospheric bacteria are subjected to osmotic stress imposed by drought and/or NaCl, two abiotic constraints frequently found in semi-arid lands. Osmostress response in bacteria involves the accumulation of small organic compounds called compatible solutes. Whereas most studies on rhizobial osmoadaptation have focussed on the model species Sinorhizobium meliloti, little is known on the osmoadaptive mechanisms used by native rhizobia, which are good sources of inoculants. In this work, we investigated the synthesis and accumulations of compatible solutes by four rhizobial strains isolated from root nodules of Phaseolus vulgaris in Tunisia, as well as by the reference strain Rhizobium tropici CIAT 899T.  相似文献   

17.
Rhizobia secrete nodulation (Nod) factors, which set in motion the formation of nitrogen-fixing root nodules on legume host plants. Nod factors induce several cellular responses in root hair cells within minutes, but also are essential for the formation of infection threads by which rhizobia enter the root. Based on studies using bacterial mutants, a two-receptor model was proposed, a signaling receptor that induces early responses with low requirements toward Nod factor structure and an entry receptor that controls infection with more stringent demands. Recently, putative Nod factor receptors were shown to be LysM domain receptor kinases. However, mutants in these receptors, in both Lotus japonicus (nfr1 and nfr5) and Medicago truncatula (Medicago; nfp), do not support the two-receptor model because they lack all Nod factor-induced responses. LYK3, the putative Medicago ortholog of NFR1, has only been studied by RNA interference, showing a role in infection thread formation. Medicago hair curling (hcl) mutants are unable to form curled root hairs, a step preceding infection thread formation. We identified the weak hcl-4 allele that is blocked during infection thread growth. We show that HCL encodes LYK3 and, thus, that this receptor, besides infection, also controls root hair curling. By using rhizobial mutants, we also show that HCL controls infection thread formation in a Nod factor structure-dependent manner. Therefore, LYK3 functions as the proposed entry receptor, specifically controlling infection. Finally, we show that LYK3, which regulates a subset of Nod factor-induced genes, is not required for the induction of NODULE INCEPTION.  相似文献   

18.
The symbiotic infection of the model legume Medicago truncatula by Sinorhizobium meliloti involves marked root hair curling, a stage where entrapment of the microsymbiont occurs in a chamber from which infection thread formation is initiated within the root hair. We have genetically dissected these early symbiotic interactions using both plant and rhizobial mutants and have identified a M. truncatula gene, HCL, which controls root hair curling. S. meliloti Nod factors, which are required for the infection process, induced wild-type epidermal nodulin gene expression and root hair deformation in hcl mutants, while Nod factor induction of cortical cell division foci was reduced compared to wild-type plants. Studies of the position of nuclei and of the microtubule cytoskeleton network of hcl mutants revealed that root hair, as well as cortical cells, were activated in response to S. meliloti. However, the asymmetric microtubule network that is typical of curled root hairs, did not form in the mutants, and activated cortical cells did not become polarised and did not exhibit the microtubular cytoplasmic bridges characteristic of the pre-infection threads induced by rhizobia in M. truncatula. These data suggest that hcl mutations alter the formation of signalling centres that normally provide positional information for the reorganisation of the microtubular cytoskeleton in epidermal and cortical cells.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of inoculum level and lime-pelleting were studied in an acid soil with respect to the nodulation and growth of lucerne (Medicago sativa cv Resis) and the population dynamics of Rhizobium meliloti. In small root-boxes (rhizotrons), the in-situ survival of inoculated rhizobia was studied in the micro-environment around the seed for a period of 12 days after sowing. During the initial 24 hours, a strong increase in rhizobial numbers was measured, concomitantly with the development of roots. As a result of lime-pelleting, rhizobial numbers were higher only at 3 days after sowing (P<0.05). Later, this difference diminished steadily. Addition of lime did not increase the adhesion of the rhizobia to the seedling tap root. Plant responses to inoculation were studied in pots. To obtain optimal nodulation, the soil had to be neutralized around the seed with lime and at least 105 cells of R. meliloti were required. With more than 105 rhizobia per seed, lime-pelleting increased the number of crown-nodulated seedlings from 24% to 77%. Higher numbers of rhizobia could not compensate the effect of lime. A strong correlation was found between crown nodulation, nitrogen content and dry weight of the shoots.  相似文献   

20.
Ultra-structural studies were conducted on root nodules of Samanea saman (Jacq.) Merr. collected from trees growing under natural conditions. Nodules were distributed singly as well as in clusters on the main and lateral roots. Mature nodules were elongated, branched and coralloid. Root hair curling was found but infection threads could not be observed. Rhizobia entered through the epidermis and moved intercellularly through the cortical region. Mature nodules of S. saman could be differentiated into meristem, cortex, vascular tissue and bacteroid tissue. The latter showed both infected and non-infected cells mixed together. Vascular bundles were inversely collateral and distributed around the bacteroid tissue. The bacteroids were enclosed in peribacteroid membrane in groups and showed prominent granules of polyhydroxybutyrate in their cytoplasm. Mycorrhizal hyphae were also observed along with rhizobia in the bacteroid tissue. S. saman with dual rhizobial and mycorrhizal infection is a potential tree for plantation in arid soils of Pakistan.  相似文献   

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