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1.
2.
The symbiotic interaction between legumes and soil bacteria (e.g., soybean [Glycine max L.] and Bradyrhizobium japonicum]) leads to the development of a new root organ, the nodule, where bacteria differentiate into bacteroids that fix atmospheric nitrogen for assimilation by the plant host. In exchange, the host plant provides a steady carbon supply to the bacteroids. This carbon can be stored within the bacteroids in the form of poly-3-hydroxybutyrate granules. The formation of this symbiosis requires communication between both partners to regulate the balance between nitrogen fixation and carbon utilization. In the present study, we describe the soybean gene GmNMNa that is specifically expressed during the infection of soybean cells by B. japonicum. GmNMNa encodes a protein of unknown function. The GmNMNa protein was localized to the nucleolus and also to the mitochondria. Silencing of GmNMNa expression resulted in reduced nodulation, a reduction in the number of bacteroids per infected cell in the nodule, and a clear reduction in the accumulation of poly-3-hydroxybutyrate in the bacteroids. Our results highlight the role of the soybean GmNMNa gene in regulating symbiotic bacterial infection, potentially through the regulation of the accumulation of carbon reserves.  相似文献   

3.
Some rare leguminous plants of the genus Crotalaria are specifically nodulated by the methylotrophic bacterium Methylobacterium nodulans. In this study, the expression and role of bacterial methylotrophy were investigated during symbiosis between M. nodulans, strain ORS 2060T, and its host legume, Crotalaria podocarpa. Using lacZ fusion to the mxaF gene, we showed that the methylotroph genes are expressed in the root nodules, suggesting methylotrophic activity during symbiosis. In addition, loss of the bacterial methylotrophic function significantly affected plant development. Indeed, inoculation of M. nodulans nonmethylotroph mutants in C. podocarpa decreased the total root nodule number per plant up to 60%, decreased the whole-plant nitrogen fixation capacity up to 42%, and reduced the total dry plant biomass up to 46% compared with the wild-type strain. In contrast, inoculation of the legume C. podocarpa with nonmethylotrophic mutants complemented with functional mxa genes restored the symbiotic wild phenotype. These results demonstrate the key role of methylotrophy during symbiosis between M. nodulans and C. podocarpa.  相似文献   

4.
Nitrogen-fixing symbiosis of legume plants with Rhizobium bacteria is established through complex interactions between two symbiotic partners. Similar to the mutual recognition and interactions at the initial stages of symbiosis, nitrogen fixation activity of rhizobia inside root nodules of the host legume is also controlled by specific interactions during later stages of nodule development. We isolated a novel Fix(-) mutant, ineffective greenish nodules 1 (ign1), of Lotus japonicus, which forms apparently normal nodules containing endosymbiotic bacteria, but does not develop nitrogen fixation activity. Map-based cloning of the mutated gene allowed us to identify the IGN1 gene, which encodes a novel ankyrin-repeat protein with transmembrane regions. IGN1 expression was detected in all organs of L. japonicus and not enhanced in the nodulation process. Immunoanalysis, together with expression analysis of a green fluorescent protein-IGN1 fusion construct, demonstrated localization of the IGN1 protein in the plasma membrane. The ign1 nodules showed extremely rapid premature senescence. Irregularly enlarged symbiosomes with multiple bacteroids were observed at early stages (8-9 d post inoculation) of nodule formation, followed by disruption of the symbiosomes and disintegration of nodule infected cell cytoplasm with aggregation of the bacteroids. Although the exact biochemical functions of the IGN1 gene are still to be elucidated, these results indicate that IGN1 is required for differentiation and/or persistence of bacteroids and symbiosomes, thus being essential for functional symbiosis.  相似文献   

5.
Mineral nturient defiencies are a major constraint limiting legume nitrogen fixation and yield. In this review general techniques for assessing nutrient involvement in symbiotic nitrogen fixation are described and specific methods are outlined for determining which developmental phase of the symbiosis is most sensitive to nutrient deficiency. The mineral nutrition of the Rhizobium component of the symbiosis is considered both as the free living organism in the soil and as bacteroids in root nodules. Rhizobial growth and survival in soils is not usually limited by nutrient availability. Multiplication of rhizobia in the legume rhizosphere is limited by low Ca availability. Nodule initiation is affected by severe Co deficiency through effects on rhizobia. Nodule development is limited by severe B deficiency via an effect on plant cell growth. Fe deficiency limits nodule development by affecting rhizobia and strains of rhizobia differ widely in their ability to acquire sufficient Fe for their symbiotic development. Nodule function requires more Mo than does the host plant, and in some symbioses nitrogen fixation may be specifically limited by low availability of Ca, Co, Cu and Fe. The importance of the peribacteriod membrane in determining nutrient availability to bacteroids is considered. It is concluded that the whole legume-Rhizobium symbiosis should be considered when improving legume growth and yield under nutrient stress conditions. Differences among rhizobial strains in their ability to obtain mineral nutrients from their environment may be agronomically important.  相似文献   

6.
In nitrogen-poor soils, rhizobia elicit nodule formation on legume roots, within which they differentiate into bacteroids that fix atmospheric nitrogen. Protection against reactive oxygen species (ROS) was anticipated to play an important role in Rhizobium-legume symbiosis because nitrogenase is extremely oxygen sensitive. We deleted the sodA gene encoding the sole cytoplasmic superoxide dismutase (SOD) of Sinorhizobium meliloti. The resulting mutant, deficient in superoxide dismutase, grew almost normally and was only moderately sensitive to oxidative stress when free living. In contrast, its symbiotic properties in alfalfa were drastically affected. Nitrogen-fixing ability was severely impaired. More strikingly, most SOD-deficient bacteria did not reach the differentiation stage of nitrogen-fixing bacteroids. The SOD-deficient mutant nodulated poorly and displayed abnormal infection. After release into plant cells, a large number of bacteria failed to differentiate into bacteroids and rapidly underwent senescence. Thus, bacterial SOD plays a key protective role in the symbiotic process.  相似文献   

7.
The legume-rhizobia symbiosis is a classical mutualism where fixed carbon and nitrogen are exchanged between the species. Nonetheless, the plant carbon that fuels nitrogen (N(2)) fixation could be diverted to rhizobial reproduction by 'cheaters'--rhizobial strains that fix less N(2) but potentially gain the benefit of fixation by other rhizobia. Host sanctions can decrease the relative fitness of less-beneficial reproductive bacteroids and prevent cheaters from breaking down the mutualism. However, in certain legume species, only undifferentiated rhizobia reproduce, while only terminally differentiated rhizobial bacteroids fix nitrogen. Sanctions were, therefore, tested in two legume species that host non-reproductive bacteroids. We demonstrate that even legume species that host non-reproductive bacteroids, specifically pea and alfalfa, can severely sanction undifferentiated rhizobia when bacteroids within the same nodule fail to fix N(2). Hence, host sanctions by a diverse set of legumes play a role in maintaining N(2) fixation.  相似文献   

8.
The lateral transfer of symbiotic genes converting a predisposed soil bacteria into a legume symbiont has occurred repeatedly and independently during the evolution of rhizobia. We experimented the transfer of a symbiotic plasmid between Bradyrhizobium strains. The originality of the DOA9 donor is that it harbours a symbiotic mega-plasmid (pDOA9) containing nod, nif and T3SS genes while the ORS278 recipient has the unique property of inducing nodules on some Aeschynomene species in the absence of Nod factors (NFs). We observed that the chimeric strain ORS278-pDOA9* lost its ability to develop a functional symbiosis with Aeschynomene. indica and Aeschynomene evenia. The mutation of rhcN and nodB led to partial restoration of nodule efficiency, indicating that T3SS effectors and NFs block the establishment of the NF-independent symbiosis. Conversely, ORS278-pDOA9* strain acquired the ability to form nodules on Crotalaria juncea and Macroptillium artropurpureum but not on NF-dependent Aeschynomene (A. afraspera and A. americana), suggesting that the ORS278 strain also harbours incompatible factors that block the interaction with these species. These data indicate that the symbiotic properties of a chimeric rhizobia cannot be anticipated due to new combination of symbiotic and non-symbiotic determinants that may interfere during the interaction with the host plant.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Hemoglobins are ubiquitous in nature and among the best-characterized proteins. Genetics has revealed crucial roles for human hemoglobins, but similar data are lacking for plants. Plants contain symbiotic and nonsymbiotic hemoglobins; the former are thought to be important for symbiotic nitrogen fixation (SNF). In legumes, SNF occurs in specialized organs, called nodules, which contain millions of nitrogen-fixing rhizobia, called bacteroids. The induction of nodule-specific plant genes, including those encoding symbiotic leghemoglobins (Lb), accompanies nodule development. Leghemoglobins accumulate to millimolar concentrations in the cytoplasm of infected plant cells prior to nitrogen fixation and are thought to buffer free oxygen in the nanomolar range, avoiding inactivation of oxygen-labile nitrogenase while maintaining high oxygen flux for respiration. Although widely accepted, this hypothesis has never been tested in planta. Using RNAi, we abolished symbiotic leghemoglobin synthesis in nodules of the model legume Lotus japonicus. This caused an increase in nodule free oxygen, a decrease in the ATP/ADP ratio, loss of bacterial nitrogenase protein, and absence of SNF. However, LbRNAi plants grew normally when fertilized with mineral nitrogen. These data indicate roles for leghemoglobins in oxygen transport and buffering and prove for the first time that plant hemoglobins are crucial for symbiotic nitrogen fixation.  相似文献   

11.
Strains of Bradyrhizobium spp. form nitrogen-fixing symbioses with many legumes, including soybean. Although inorganic sulfur is preferred by bacteria in laboratory conditions, sulfur in agricultural soil is mainly present as sulfonates and sulfur esters. Here, we show that Bradyrhizobium japonicum and B. elkanii strains were able to utilize sulfate, cysteine, sulfonates, and sulfur-ester compounds as sole sulfur sources for growth. Expression and functional analysis revealed that two sets of gene clusters (bll6449 to bll6455 or bll7007 to bll7011) are important for utilization of sulfonates sulfur source. The bll6451 or bll7010 genes are also expressed in the symbiotic nodules. However, B. japonicum mutants defective in either of the sulfonate utilization operons were not affected for symbiosis with soybean, indicating the functional redundancy or availability of other sulfur sources in planta. In accordance, B. japonicum bacteroids possessed significant sulfatase activity. These results indicate that strains of Bradyrhizobium spp. likely use organosulfur compounds for growth and survival in soils, as well as for legume nodulation and nitrogen fixation.  相似文献   

12.
Research on the nitrogen-fixing symbiosis has been focused, thus far, on two model legumes, Medicago truncatula and Lotus japonicus, which use a sophisticated infection process involving infection thread formation. However, in 25% of the legumes, the bacterial entry occurs more simply in an intercellular fashion. Among them, some Aeschynomene spp. are nodulated by photosynthetic Bradyrhizobium spp. that do not produce Nod factors. This interaction is believed to represent a living testimony of the ancestral state of the rhizobium-legume symbiosis. To decipher the mechanisms of this Nod-independent process, we propose Aeschynomene evenia as a model legume because it presents all the characteristics required for genetic and molecular analysis. It is a short-perennial and autogamous species, with a diploid and relatively small genome (2n=20; 460 Mb/1C). A. evenia 'IRFL6945' is nodulated by the well-characterized photosynthetic Bradyrhizobium sp. strain ORS278 and is efficiently transformed by Agrobacterium rhizogenes. Aeschynomene evenia is genetically homozygous but polymorphic accessions were found. A manual hybridization procedure has been set up, allowing directed crosses. Therefore, it should be relatively straightforward to unravel the molecular determinants of the Nod-independent process in A. evenia. This should shed new light on the evolution of rhizobium-legume symbiosis and could have important agronomic implications.  相似文献   

13.
We investigated the presence of endophytic rhizobia within the roots of the wetland wild rice Oryza breviligulata, which is the ancestor of the African cultivated rice Oryza glaberrima. This primitive rice species grows in the same wetland sites as Aeschynomene sensitiva, an aquatic stem-nodulated legume associated with photosynthetic strains of Bradyrhizobium. Twenty endophytic and aquatic isolates were obtained at three different sites in West Africa (Senegal and Guinea) from nodal roots of O. breviligulata and surrounding water by using A. sensitiva as a trap legume. Most endophytic and aquatic isolates were photosynthetic and belonged to the same phylogenetic Bradyrhizobium/Blastobacter subgroup as the typical photosynthetic Bradyrhizobium strains previously isolated from Aeschynomene stem nodules. Nitrogen-fixing activity, measured by acetylene reduction, was detected in rice plants inoculated with endophytic isolates. A 20% increase in the shoot growth and grain yield of O. breviligulata grown in a greenhouse was also observed upon inoculation with one endophytic strain and one Aeschynomene photosynthetic strain. The photosynthetic Bradyrhizobium sp. strain ORS278 extensively colonized the root surface, followed by intercellular, and rarely intracellular, bacterial invasion of the rice roots, which was determined with a lacZ-tagged mutant of ORS278. The discovery that photosynthetic Bradyrhizobium strains, which are usually known to induce nitrogen-fixing nodules on stems of the legume Aeschynomene, are also natural true endophytes of the primitive rice O. breviligulata could significantly enhance cultivated rice production.  相似文献   

14.
Partial sequences of the form I (cbbL) and form II (cbbM) of the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO) large subunit genes were obtained from the brine and interface of the MgCl2-dominated deep hypersaline anoxic basin Discovery. CbbL and cbbM genes were found in both brine and interface of the Discovery Basin but were absent in the overlying seawater. The diversity of both genes in the brine and interface was low, which might caused by the extreme saline conditions in Discovery of approximately 5 M MgCl2. None of the retrieved sequences were closely related to sequences deposited in the GenBank database. A phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that the cbbL sequences were affiliated with a Thiobacillus sp. or with one of the RuBisCO genes from Hydrogenovibrio marinus. The cbbM sequences clustered with thiobacilli or formed a new group with no close relatives. The results implicate that bacteria with the potential for carbon dioxide fixation and chemoautotrophy are present in the Discovery Basin. This is the first report demonstrating that RuBisCO genes are present under hypersaline conditions of 5 M MgCl2.  相似文献   

15.
Infection of legume roots with Rhizobium species results in the development of a root nodule structure in which the bacteria form an intracellular symbiosis with the plant. We report here that the infection of soybean (Glycine max L.) roots with Rhizobium japonicum results in the synthesis by the plant of at least 18–20 polypeptides other than leghemoglobin during the development of root nodules. Identification of these “nodule-specific” host polypeptides (referred to as nodulins) was accomplished by two-dimensional gel analysis of the immunoprecipitates formed by a “nodule-specific” antiserum with in vitro translation products of root-nodule polysomes that are free of bacteroidal contaminations. Nodulins account for 7–11% of the total 35S-methionine-labeled protein synthesized in the host cell cytoplasm, and the majority of them are of 12,000–20,000 molecular weight. These proteins are absent from the uninfected roots, bacteroids and free-living Rhizobium, and appear to be coded for by the plant genes that may be obligatory for the development of symbiosis in the legume root nodules. Analysis of nodulins in ineffective (unable to fix nitrogen) nodules developed due to Rhizobium strains SM5 and 61A24 showed that their synthesis is reduced and their expression differentially influenced by mutations in rhizobia. Two polypeptides of bacterial origin were also found to be cross-reactive with the “nodule-specific” antiserum, suggesting that they are secreted by Rhizobium into the host cell cytoplasm during symbiotic nitrogen fixation.  相似文献   

16.
Symbiotic rhizobia differentiate physiologically and morphologically into nitrogen-fixing bacteroids inside legume host nodules. The differentiation is apparently terminal in some legume species, such as peas (Pisum sativum) and peanuts (Arachis hypogaea), likely due to extreme cell swelling induced by the host. In other legume species, such as beans (Phaseolus vulgaris) and cowpeas (Vigna unguiculata), differentiation into bacteroids, which are similar in size and shape to free-living rhizobia, is reversible. Bacteroid modification by plants may affect the effectiveness of the symbiosis. Here, we compare symbiotic efficiency of rhizobia in two different hosts where the rhizobia differentiate into swollen nonreproductive bacteroids in one host and remain nonswollen and reproductive in the other. Two such dual-host strains were tested: Rhizobium leguminosarum A34 in peas and beans and Bradyrhizobium sp. 32H1 in peanuts and cowpeas. In both comparisons, swollen bacteroids conferred more net host benefit by two measures: return on nodule construction cost (plant growth per gram nodule growth) and nitrogen fixation efficiency (H2 production by nitrogenase per CO2 respired). Terminal bacteroid differentiation among legume species has evolved independently multiple times, perhaps due to the increased host fitness benefits observed in this study.Legume-rhizobia interactions vary widely across a diverse paraphyletic group of soil bacteria known for symbiotic nitrogen fixation inside root nodules of over 18,000 species of legumes throughout the world (Lewis et al., 2005). In several legume species, rhizobial cells are induced to swell during their differentiation into nitrogen-fixing bacteroids (Oono et al., 2010). These legume species belong to five different major papilionoid clades (inverted repeat-lacking clade, genistoids, dalbergioids, mirbelioids, and millettioids), a pattern suggestive of convergent evolution. Swelling apparently leads to terminal differentiation; swollen bacteroids no longer divide normally (Zhou et al., 1985). In other legume host species, bacteroid differentiation is less extreme, leading to nonswollen bacteroids. Nonswollen bacteroids are similar in shape and size to free-living rhizobia and divide normally once outside of their nodules. The proximate mechanisms for host-imposed bacteroid swelling have been investigated (Van de Velde et al., 2010), but what drove the repeated evolution of this trait? The multiple independent origins of host traits causing bacteroids to swell suggest that swollen bacteroids may provide more net benefit to legumes. Could the swelling of bacteroids improve nitrogen fixation efficiency (e.g. nitrogen fixed relative to carbon cost)? In this study, we compare symbiotic efficiencies of rhizobia in legume hosts that are evolutionarily diverged but share a common effective rhizobial strain, whose bacteroids are swollen in one host and nonswollen in the other.Variations among host species in benefits and costs of symbiosis with rhizobia are not commonly explored (Thrall et al., 2000) because legume species typically nodulate with only one group of rhizobia (e.g. Sinorhizobium sp. in Medicago), although some legumes and some rhizobia are more promiscuous. Rhizobium sp. NGR234 has the largest known host range but does not fix nitrogen effectively with any legume species currently recognized to induce swelling of rhizobial bacteroids (Pueppke and Broughton, 1999). Some Sinorhizobium fredii strains apparently fix nitrogen in certain cultivars of soybean (Glycine max; hosting nonswollen bacteroids) and alfalfa (Medicago sativa; hosting swollen bacteroids; Hashem et al., 1997), but our efforts to replicate these results did not lead to successful nodulation. Therefore, we studied two strains, a transgenic strain that nodulates beans (Phaseolus vulgaris) and peas (Pisum sativum) and a second wild strain harvested from cowpeas (Vigna unguiculata) that also nodulates peanuts (Arachis hypogaea). Beans and cowpeas are both within the Phaseolid group and do not induce terminal differentiation of rhizobial bacteroids. Peas and peanuts both host terminally differentiated bacteroids but are in distant clades and likely have different genetic origins for traits that induce terminal differentiation (Oono et al., 2010). Also, the swollen bacteroids in peas are branched while those in peanuts are spherical.Differences in symbiotic qualities between swollen and nonswollen bacteroids have been previously explored in peanuts and cowpeas by Sen and Weaver (1980, 1981, 1984), who also hypothesized that swollen bacteroids are more beneficial to the host plant than nonswollen ones. They found 1.5 to 3 times greater acetylene reduction by nitrogenase (as well as plant nitrogen) per nodule mass in peanuts than in cowpeas at multiple nodule ages (Sen and Weaver, 1980). Acetylene reduction per bacteroid was also greater in peanuts than in cowpeas when measuring whole nodules, but this difference disappeared when isolated bacteroids were assayed (Sen and Weaver, 1984). They concluded that swelling of peanut bacteroids per se was not responsible for the higher rate of nitrogen fixation per bacteroid. They suggested that in cowpea nodules, with greater numbers of smaller bacteroids per nodule volume, availability of oxygen to each bacteroid might be restricted such that the rate of oxidative phosphorylation, necessary for nitrogen fixation, is reduced. Fixation rates per bacteroid may be different between hosts due to nodule gas permeability or bacteroid crowding within nodules. However, fixation efficiency (nitrogen fixed per carbon respired) would not necessarily be affected by these and may be more important for the host than the rate of fixation.Rhizobial performances are often compared by measuring the symbiotic benefits, e.g. rates of acetylene reduction or plant growth (Sen and Weaver, 1984; Hashem et al., 1997; Lodwig et al., 2005), but rarely by measuring the symbiotic costs, e.g. carbon consumed or respired. Up to 25% of a legume’s net photosynthate may be required for nitrogen fixation by rhizobia (Minchin et al., 1981). Faster fixation rates (mol nitrogen per s) can be beneficial for hosts, but carbon costs can also be important. Rhizobia that fix more nitrogen per carbon respired could free more carbon for other functions, including the option of supporting more nodules with the same amount of photosynthate. If legumes are sometimes carbon limited, then improved carbon-use efficiency could enhance plant fitness. Measuring both benefits and costs is therefore key to an accurate understanding of the symbiotic performance of a rhizobial strain.While we recognize the many physiological differences between peas and beans or peanuts and cowpeas, the fact that terminal differentiation induced by host legumes evolved multiple times independently (Oono et al., 2010) suggests there may be some consistent host symbiotic benefit, such as improved fixation efficiency. Here, we measured the efficiency of each of two strains as swollen bacteroids in one host and nonswollen bacteroids in another. We measured nitrogenase activity as hydrogen (H2) production in an N2-free atmosphere (Layzell et al., 1984; Witty and Minchin, 1998), and compared it to carbon dioxide (CO2) respiration to estimate return on nodule operation cost. We also compared host biomass growth per total nodule mass growth to estimate return on nodule construction cost. To further assess carbon allocation to the different types of bacteroids, we also measured the average amounts per bacteroid of polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB), an energy storage compound that can comprise up to 50% of bacteroid dry weight (Trainer and Charles, 2006). A greater PHB accumulation per bacteroid may require a decreased allocation of carbon for nitrogenase activity within the bacteroids, and hence, less plant growth per carbon invested in bacteroids. We demonstrate that peas and peanuts that host swollen bacteroids have higher fixation efficiency as well as greater plant return on nodule construction than beans and cowpeas, respectively, nodulated with the same rhizobial strains. PHB was not consistently correlated with plant:nodule growth efficiency with the tested strains. These findings show that swollen bacteroids can indeed provide greater benefits to their legume hosts.  相似文献   

17.
Legume–rhizobia symbioses play a major role in food production for an ever growing human population. In this symbiosis, dinitrogen is reduced (“fixed”) to ammonia by the rhizobial nitrogenase enzyme complex and is secreted to the plant host cells, whereas dicarboxylic acids derived from photosynthetically produced sucrose are transported into the symbiosomes and serve as respiratory substrates for the bacteroids. The symbiosome membrane contains high levels of SST1 protein, a sulfate transporter. Sulfate is an essential nutrient for all living organisms, but its importance for symbiotic nitrogen fixation and nodule metabolism has long been underestimated. Using chemical imaging, we demonstrate that the bacteroids take up 20‐fold more sulfate than the nodule host cells. Furthermore, we show that nitrogenase biosynthesis relies on high levels of imported sulfate, making sulfur as essential as carbon for the regulation and functioning of symbiotic nitrogen fixation. Our findings thus establish the importance of sulfate and its active transport for the plant–microbe interaction that is most relevant for agriculture and soil fertility.  相似文献   

18.
The cbbL and cbbS genes encoding form I ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO) large and small subunits in the ammonia-oxidizing bacterium Nitrosomonas sp. strain ENI-11 were cloned and sequenced. The deduced gene products, CbbL and CbbS, had 93 and 87% identity with Thiobacillus intermedius CbbL and Nitrobacter winogradskyi CbbS, respectively. Expression of cbbL and cbbS in Escherichia coli led to the detection of RubisCO activity in the presence of 0.1 mM isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG). To our knowledge, this is the first paper to report the genes involved in the carbon fixation reaction in chemolithotrophic ammonia-oxidizing bacteria.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Experiments were performed to measure the pH-sensitive steps in nodulation and symbiotic fixation byPisum sativum and isolate RP-212-1 ofRhizobium leguminosarum. An aeroponic system with rigorous pH control was used to obtain numerous effective nodules. After exposure to various pH levels, the following responses were measured: (1) legume root growth and development, (2) survival and growth rate of a single effective bacterial isolate, (3) degree of nodulation, (4) rate of nitrogen fixation, (5) plant biomass, and (6) nitrogen content of plants. Both bacterial growth and root development were adequate at all pH levels from 4.4 to 6.6, but efficient nodulation and nitrogen fixation did not occur at pH 4.8 and below. The processes required for symbiosis were about 10 times as sensitive to acidity as either bacterial growth or root growth alone. Nodulation was the most acid-sensitive step.  相似文献   

20.
Symbiotic nitrogen fixation involves the development, on the legume plant root, of specialised organs called nodules, within which plant photosynthates are exchanged for combined nitrogen of bacterial origin. The glnB gene encodes a signal transduction protein (P(II)) which is a component of the bacterial nitrogen regulation (Ntr) system and an essential regulator of ammonium assimilation. We demonstrate that in Rhizobium leguminosarum the glnB promoter is strongly regulated by nitrogen and NtrC, but still shows a significant level of activity in conditions of nitrogen excess. Expression of genes involved in nitrogen assimilation has been shown to be absent in nitrogen-fixing bacteroids, and, in agreement with this, we find that the glnB promoter is down-regulated during bacteroid differentiation at a time coincident with the arrest of bacterial division in the nodule. This pattern is common to other bacterial genes involved in nitrogen assimilation and it is noteworthy that the zone where the glnB promoter is active is coincident with the region in which NtrC is expressed.  相似文献   

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