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1.
Nodulated soybeans (Glycine max L. Merr, cv. Maple Arrow) were exposed to various physiological and environmental treatments to determine the relationship between nodule adenylate pools and the degree of O2 limitation of nitrogenase. Adenylate energy charge (AEC = [ATP + 0.5 ADP]/[ATP + ADP + AMP]) and ATP/ADP ratios declined under conditions of decreased (10%) external pO2 but increased in nodules exposed to elevated (30%) external pO2. Nitrogenase activity was inhibited by both pO2 treatments, but recovered towards initial levels within 45 min. AEC also returned to initial levels during this period. To account for these and related data in the literature, it was hypothesized that 1) legume nodules regulate infected cell O2 concentration (Oi) to maintain adenylate pools at levels which limit respiratory metabolism: 2) treatments which decrease Oi alter the adenylate pools and further limit nodule metabolism; 3) treatments which increase Oi to levels in excess of a narrow range alter the adenylate pools and activate biochemical pathways which are not conducive to nitrogenase activity. In a preliminary test of these hypotheses, changes in AEC and ATP/ADP ratio were studied in nodules in which nitrogenase activity was inhibited by stem girdling, nitrate fertilization and exposure to an Ar:O2 atmosphere. All three treatments caused an increased O2 limitation of nodule respiration and nitrogenase activity. However, decreases in AEC were observed only in the stem girdling and nitrate fertilization treatment: Ar:O2 exposure had no effect on whole nodule AEC. While this result challenged the hypotheses suggesting a central role for adenylates in the regulation of O2-limited metabolism, it was noted that the Ar:O2 treatment would differ from the other treatments in that it would have a specific effect on the ATP demands for NH3 assimilation in the plant fraction. Since AEC and ATP/ADP ratio would be affected by both the rate of ATP synthesis (potentially an O2-limited process) and the demand for ATP, changes in these parameters in the whole nodule may not be a reliable indicator of adenylate-mediated O2 limitation. Futher studies are needed to examine in vivo changes in adenylate pools in the plant and bacteroid fractions in nodules which vary in their degree of O2-limited metabolism.  相似文献   

2.
The objectives of this study were to determine whether attached nodules of soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) could adjust to gradual increases in rhizosphere pO2 without nitrogenase inhibition and to determine whether the nitrogenase activity of the nodules is limited by pO2 under ambient conditions. A computer-controlled gas blending apparatus was used to produce linear increases (ramps) in pO2 around attached nodulated roots of soybean plants in an open gas exchange system. Nitrogenase activity (H2 production in N2:O2 and Ar:O2) and respiration (CO2 evolution) were monitored continuously as pO2 was ramped from 20 to 30 kilopascals over periods of 0, 5, 10, 15, and 30 minutes. The 0, 5, and 10 minute ramps caused inhibitions of nitrogenase and respiration rates followed by recoveries of these rates to their initial values within 30 minutes. Distinct oscillations in nitrogenase activity and respiration were observed during the recovery period, and the possible basis for these oscillations is discussed. The 15 and 30 minute ramps did not inhibit nitrogenase activity, suggesting that such inhibition is not a factor in the regulation of nodule diffusion resistance. During the 30 minute ramp, a stimulation of nitrogenase activity was observed, indicating that an O2-based limitation to nitrogenase activity occurs in soybean nodules under ambient conditions.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of excision on O2 diffusion and metabolism in soybean nodules   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Nitrogen-fixing nodules of soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr. cv. Maple Arrow inoculated with Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 16] were studied before and after excision from the root to determine the role the O2 regulation plays in the inhibition of nodule activity and the potential for using excised nodules nodules in studies of nodule metabolism. Relative nitrogenase (EC 1.7.99.2) activity (H2 evolution in N2:O2) and nodule respiration (CO2 evolution) were monitored first in intact nodulated roots and then in freshly excised nodules of the same plant to determine the time course of the decline in nodule metabolism. Folowing excision, nitrogenase activity and respiration declined rapidly in the first minute and then more gradually. After 40 min the rate of H2 evolution was only 14–28% of that in the intact plant. In some nodules activity declined steadily, and in others there was a partial recovery in activity ca 10 min after detachment. Infected cell O2 concentration (Oi), measured by a spectro-photometric technique, also declined after nodule detachment with a time course similar to the declines in nitrogenase activity and respiration. Following excision, Oi levels declined rapidly from ca 21 nM in attached nodules to 8–12 nM at 4–10 min after excision and then more gradually to 2–3 nM O2 at 30–40 min after excision. These results show that the nodules' permeability to gas diffusion continued to be regulated for up to 40 min after detachement. At 40 min after detachment, when excised nodules displayed steady-state rates of gas exchange, linear increases in pO2 from 20 to 100% at 4% min?1 resulted in recoveries of H2 and CO2 evolution, indicating that Oi limited nitrogenase activity durig this period, and that energy reserves were greatly in excess of the O2 available for respiration. When detached nodules were equilibrated for 12 h at 20, 30 and 50% O2, Oi values measured at supra-ambient pO2 were greater than those at 20% O2 and were linked with a more rapid decline in nitrogenase activity. Also, increases in external pO2 (Oc) failed to stimulate nodule metabolism, suggesting that the nodules' energy reserves were no longer greatly in excess of their respiratory demands. It was concluded that soybean nodules could provide useful material for steady-state studies of nodule metabolism between 40 and 240 min after detachment, but to attain metabolic rates equivalent to in vivo rates the nodules must be exposed to above-ambient pO2.  相似文献   

4.
An open gas exchange system was used to monitor the nonsteady state and steady state changes in nitrogenase activity (H2 evolution in N2:O2 and Ar:O2) and respiration (CO2 evolution) in attached, excised, and sliced nodules of soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) exposed to external pO2 of 5 to 100%. In attached nodules, increases in external pO2 in steps of 10 or 20% resulted in sharp declines in the rates of H2 and CO2 evolution. Recovery of these rates to values equal to or greater than their initial rates occurred within 10 to 60 minutes of exposure to the higher pO2. Recovery was more rapid at higher initial pO2 and in Ar:O2 compared to N2:O2. Sequential 10% increments in pO2 to 100% O2 resulted in rates of H2 evolution which were 1.4 to 1.7 times the steady state rate at 20% O2 in Ar. This was attributed to a relief at high pO2 from the 40% decline in nitrogenase activity that was induced by Ar at a pO2 of 20%. Changes in nodule respiration rate could not account for the nodules' ability to adjust to high external pO2, supporting the hypothesis that soybean nodules have a variable barrier to O2 diffusion which responds slowly (within minutes) to changes in pO2. Nodule excision and slicing resulted in 45 and 78% declines, respectively, in total specific nitrogenase activity at 20% O2. In contrast with the result obtained with intact nodules, subsequent 10% increases in pO2 in Ar:O2 did not result in transient declines in H2 evolution rates, but in the rapid attainment of new steady state rates. Also, distinct optima in nitrogenase activity were observed at about 60% O2. These results were consistent with an increase in the diffusive resistance of the nodule cortex following nodule excision or nodule slicing. This work also shows the importance of using intact plants and continuous measurements of gas exchange in studies of O2 diffusion and nitrogenase activity in legume nodules.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of increasing rhizosphere pO2on nitrogenase activity and nodule resistance to O2diffusion were investigated in soybean plants [Glycine max (L.) Merr. cv. Harosoy 63] in which nitrogenase (EC 1.7.99.2) activities were inhibited by (a) removal of the phloem tissue at the base of the stem (stem girdling), (b) exposure of roots to 10 mM NO3over 5 days (NO3-treated), or (c) partial inactivation of nitrogenase activity by an exposure of nodulated roots to 100 kPa O2(O2-inhibitcd). In control plants and in plants which had been treated with 100 kPa O2, increasing rhizosphere O2concentrations in 10 kPa increments from 20 to 70 kPa did not alter the steady-state nitrogenase activity. In contrast, in plants in which nitrogenase activities were depressed by stem girdling or by exposure to NO3, increasing rhizosphere pO2resulted in a recovery of 57 or 67%, respectively, of the initial, depressed rates of nitrogenase activity. This suggests that the nitrogenase activity of stem-girdled and NO3-treated soybeans was O2-limited. For each treatment, theoretical resistance values for O2diffusion into nodules were estimated from measured rates of CO2exchange, assuming a respiratory quotient of 1.1 and 0 kPa of O2in the infected cells. At an external partial pressure of 20 kPa O2, the stem-girdled and NO3--treated plants displayed resistance values which were 4 to 8.6 times higher than those in the nodules of the control plants. In control and O2-inhibited plants, increases in pO2from 20 to 70 kPa in 10 kPa increments resulted in a 2.5- to 3.9-fold increase in diffusion resistance to O2, and had little effect on either respiration or nitrogenase activity. In contrast, in stem-girdled and NO3--treated plants, increases in external pO2had little effect on diffusion resistance to O2, but resulted in a 2.3- to 3.2-fold increase in nodule respiration and nitrogenase activity. These results are consistent with stem-girdling and NO3--inhibition treatments limiting phloem supply to nodules causing an increase in diffusion resistance to O2at 20 kPa and an apparent insensitivity of diffusion resistance to increases in external pO2.  相似文献   

6.
The N2-fixing legume nodule requires O2 for ATP production; however, the O2 sensitivity of nitrogenase dictates a requirement for a low pO2 inside the nodule. The effects of long term exposures to various pO2s on N2[C2H2] fixation were evaluated with intact soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr., var. Wye) plants. Continuous exposure of their rhizosphere to a pO2 of 0.06 atmospheres initially reduced nitrogenase activity by 37 to 45% with restoration of original activity in 4 to 24 hours and with no further change in tests up to 95 hours; continuous exposure to 0.02 atmosphere of O2 initially reduced nitrogenase activity 72%, with only partial recovery by 95 hours. Similar exposures to a pO2 of 0.32 atmospheres had little effect on N2[C2H2] fixation; a pO2 of 0.89 atmospheres initially reduced nitrogenase activity by 98% with restoration to only 14 to 24% of that of the ambient O2 controls by 95 hours. Re-exposure to ambient pO2 of plants adapted to nonambient pO2s reduced N2[C2H2] fixation to similar magnitudes as the reductions which occurred upon initial exposure to variant pO2 conditions, and a time period was required to readapt to ambient O2. It is concluded that the N2[C2H2]-fixing system of intact soybean plants is able to adapt to a wide range of external pO2s as probably occur in soil. We postulate that this occurs through an undefined mechanism which enables the nodule to maintain an internal pO2 optimal for nitrogenase activity.  相似文献   

7.
When Frankia HFPCcI3 was grown in culture at oxygen O2 levels ranging from 2 to 70 kilopascals O2, under nitrogen fixing conditions, nitrogenase activity adapted to ambient pO2 and showed a marked optimum close to growth pO2. Vesicles were thin walled at low pO2 and very thick walled at high pO2. Freeze fracture transmission electron microscopy confirmed that Frankia produces vesicles with outer walls thickened by multiple lipid-like monolayers, in proportion to ambient pO2.  相似文献   

8.
Inhibition of nitrogenase (EC 1.18.6.1) activity by O2 has been suggested to be an early response to disturbance in carbon supply to root nodules in the Frankia‐Alnus incana symbiosis. Intact nodulated root systems of plants kept in prolonged darkness of 22 h were used to test responses to O2 and short‐term N2 deprivation (1 h in Ar:O2). By using a Frankia lacking uptake hydrogenase it was possible to follow nitrogenase activity over time as H2 evolution in a gas exchange system. Respiration was simultaneously recorded as CO2 evolution. Dark‐treated plants had lower initial nitrogenase activity in N2:O2 (68% of controls), which declined further during a 1‐h period in the assay system in N2:O2 at 21 and 17% O2, but not at 13% O2. When dark‐treated plants were deprived of N2 at 21 and 17% O2 nitrogenase activity declined rapidly to 61 and 74%, respectively, after 20 min, compared with control plants continuously kept in their normal light regime. In contrast, there was no decline in dark‐treated plants at 13% O2, and only a smaller and temporary decline in control plants at 21% O2. When dark‐treated plants were kept at 21% O2 during 45 min prior to N2 deprivation at 17% O2 the decline was abolished. This supports the idea that the decline in nitrogenase activity observed in N2:O2 at 21% O2 and during N2 deprivation was caused by O2, which affected a sensitive nodule fraction. Nodule contents of the amino acids Gln and Cit decreased during N2 deprivation, suggesting decreased assimilation of NH4+. Contents of ATP and ADP in nodules were not affected by short‐term N2 deprivation. ATP/ADP ratios were about 5 indicating a highly aerobic metabolism in the root nodule. We conclude that nitrogenase activity of Alnus plants exposed to prolonged darkness becomes more sensitive to inactivation by O2. It seemed that dark‐treated plants could not adjust their nodule metabolism at higher perceived pO2 and during cessation of NH4+ production.  相似文献   

9.
Nodulated soybean (Glycine max L. Merr. cv White Eye inoculated with Bradyrhizobium japonicum strain CB 1809) plants were cultured in the absence of combined N from 8 to 28 days with their root systems maintained continuously in 1, 2.5, 5, 10, 20, 40, 60, or 80% O2 (volume/volume) in N2. Plant dry matter yield was unaffected by partial pressure of oxygen (pO2) and N2 fixation showed a broad plateau of maximum activity from 2.5 to 40 or 60% O2. Slight inhibition of nitrogenase activity occurred at 1% O2 and as much as 50% inhibition occurred at 80% O2. Low pO2 (less than 10%) decreased nodule mass on plants, but this was compensated for by those nodules having higher specific nitrogenase activities. Synthesis and export of ureides in xylem was maintained at a high level (70-95% of total soluble N in exudate) over the range of pO2 used. Measurements of nitrogenase (EC 1.7.99.2) activity by acetylene reduction indicated that adaptation of nodules to low pO2 was largely due to changes in ventilation characteristics and involved increased permeability to gases in those grown in subambient pO2 and decreased permeability in those from plants cultured with their roots in pO2 greater than ambient. A range of structural alterations in nodules resulting from low pO2 were identified. These included increased frequency of lenticels, decreased nodule size, increased volume of cortex relative to the infected central tissue of the nodule, as well as changes in the size and frequency of extracellular voids in all tissues. In nodules grown in air, the inner cortex differentiated a layer of four or five cells which formed a band, 40 to 50 micrometers thick, lacking extracellular voids. This was reduced in nodules grown in low pO2 comprising one or two cell layers and being 10 to 20 micrometers thick in those from 1% O2. Long-term adaptation to different external pO2 involved changes which modify diffusive resistance and are additional to adjustments in the variable diffusion barrier.  相似文献   

10.
Various forms of stress result in decreased O2 permeability or decreased capacity to consume O2 in legume root nodules. These changes alter the nodule interior O2 concentration (Oi). To determine the relationship between Oi and nitrogenase activity in attached soybean (Glycine max) nodules, we controlled Oi by varying external pO2 while monitoring internal H2 concentration (Hi) with microelectrodes. Oi was monitored by noninvasive leghemoglobin spectrophotometry (nodule oximetry). After each step-change in Oi, Hi approached a new steady state, with a time constant averaging 23 s. The rate of H2 production by nitrogenase was calculated as the product of Hi, nodule surface area, and nodule H2 permeability. H2 permeability was estimated from O2 permeability (measured by nodule oximetry) by assuming diffusion through air-filled pores; support for this assumption is presented. Oi was nearly optimal for nitrogenase activity (H2 production) between 15 and 150 nm. A 1- to 2-min exposure to elevated external pO2 (40-100 kPa) reduced Hi to zero, but nitrogenase activity recovered quickly under air, often in <20 min. This rapid recovery contrasts with previous reports of much slower recovery with longer exposures to elevated pO2. The mechanism of nitrogenase inhibition may differ between brief and prolonged O2 exposures.  相似文献   

11.
When excised root nodules ofCoriaria arborea are assayed for nitrogenase activity at various pO2 they show a broad optimum between 20 and 40 kPa O2, with some evidence for adaptation. Continuous flow assays of nodulated root systems of intact plants indicate that Coriaria shows an acetylene induced decline in nitrogenase activity. When root systems were subject to step changes in pO2 nitrogenase activity responded with a steep decline followed by a slower rise in activity both at lower and higher than ambient pO2. Thus Coriaria nodules are able to adapt rapidly to oxygen levels well above and well below ambient. Measurement of nodule diffusion resistance showed that the adaptation is accompanied by rapid increase in resistance at above ambient pO2 and decrease in resistance at below ambient pO2. Plants grown with root systems at pO2 from 5–40 kPa O2 did not differ in growth or nodulation. The anatomy of Coriaria nodules shows they have a dense periderm which encircles the nodule and also closely invests the infected zone. The periderm is both thicker and more heavily suberised in nodules grown at high pO2 than at low pO2. Vacuum infiltration of India ink indicates that oxygen diffusion is entirely through the lenticel and via a small gap adjacent to the stele.  相似文献   

12.
A fiber optic spectrophotometric system was used to monitor the in vivo oxygenation of leghemoglobin in intact, attached soybean root nodules (Glycine max L. Merr. × USDA 16 Bradyrhizobium japonicum) which were flattened during development by growth in narrow, glass-walled cuvettes. When equilibrated at an external pO2 of 20 kilopascals, leghemoglobin was 36.6 ± 5.4% oxygenated, a value estimated to represent an infected cell O2 concentration of 21.5 nanomolar. Increasing the external pO2 from 20 to 25 kilopascals caused a rapid increase in leghemoglobin oxygenation, followed by a recovery to the initial level, all within 7.5 minutes. At 25 kilopascals O2, the rates of H2 and CO2 evolution were similar to those at 20 kilopascals. Since respiration had not increased, the results support the proposal that nodules adapt to increased external pO2 by regulating their resistance to O2 diffusion.  相似文献   

13.
The gas exchange characteristics of intact attached nodulated roots of pea (Pisum sativum cv. Finale X) and lupin (Lupinus albus cv. Ultra) were studied under a number of environmental conditions to determine whether or not the nodules regulate resistance to oxygen diffusion. Nitrogenase activity (H2 evolution) in both species was inhibited by an increase in rhizosphere pO2 from 20% to 30%, but recovered within 30 min without a significant increase in nodulated root respiration (CO2 evolution). These data suggest that the nodules possess a variable barrier to O2 diffusion. Also, nitrogenase activity in both species declined when the roots were either exposed to an atmosphere of Ar:O2 or when the shoots of the plants were excised. These declines could be reversed by elevating rhizosphere pO2, indicating that the inhibition of nitrogenase activity resulted from an increase in gas diffusion resistance and consequent O2-limitation of nitrogenase-linked respiration. These results indicate that nodules of pea and lupin regulate their internal O2 concentration in a manner similar to nodules of soybean, despite the distinct morphological and biochemical differences that exist between the nodules of the 3 species. Experiments in which total nitrogenase activity (TNA = H2 production in Ar:O2) in pea and lupin nodules was monitored while rhizosphere pO2 was increased gradually to 100%, showed that the resistance of the nodules to O2 diffusion maintains nitrogenase activity at about 80% of its potential activity (PNA) under normal atmospheric conditions. The O2-limitation coefficient of nitrogenase (OLCN= TNA/PNA) declined significantly with prolonged exposure to Ar:O2 or with shoot excision. Together, these results indicate a significant degree of O2-limitation of nitrogenase activity in pea and lupin nodules, and that yields may be increased by realizing full potential activity.  相似文献   

14.
Nitrogenase activity in root nodules of four species of actinorhizal plants showed varying declines in response to exposure to acetylene (10% v/v). Gymnostoma papuanum (S. Moore) L. Johnson. and Casuarina equisetifolia L. nodules showed a small decline (5-15%) with little or no recovery over 15 minutes. Myrica gale L. nodules showed a sharp decline followed by a rapid return to peak activity. Alnus incana ssp. rugosa (Du Roi) Clausen. nodules usually showed varying degrees of decline followed by a slower return to peak or near-peak activity. We call these effects acetylene-induced transients. Rapid increases in oxygen tension also caused dramatic transient decreases in nitrogenase activity in all species. The magnitude of the transient decrease was related to the size of the O2 partial pressure (pO2) rise, to the proximity of the starting and ending oxygen tensions to the pO2 optimum, and to the time for which the plant was exposed to the lower pO2. Oxygen-induced transients, induced both by step jumps in pO2 and by O2 pulses, were also observed in cultures of Frankia. The effects seen in nodules are purely a response by the bacterium and not a nodule effect per se. Oxygen-induced nitrogenase transients in actinorhizal nodules from the plant genera tested here do not appear to be a result of changes in nodule diffusion resistance.  相似文献   

15.
A method based on the measurement of ATP/ADP ratios is described. It permits the determination of the critical respiratory oxygen pressure of any organ, or part of any organ, of an intact plant. The data obtained by this method with intact maize (Zea mays L. INRA 508) root tips are compared with polarographic determinations on similar excised tissues.

When internal O2 transport from the aerial part was prevented, the critical oxygen pressure found for the respiration of intact tips was similar to that found with excised tips. It was close to 10 kilopascals in a humid atmosphere and about 30 kilopascals in a liquid medium. Flooding of the gas spaces by vacuum infiltration did not modify these results. When internal O2 transport from the aerial parts of the plant occurred, significantly lower values were obtained in liquid medium for the critical oxygen pressure, which shifted from more than 21 to 6 kilopascals. The higher values observed with excised root tips, compared to those obtained with intact tissues, can be explained by the lack of internal O2 transport, rather than by the flooding of gas spaces.

Data are presented which show that root growth started to be limited at a significantly higher pressure than the respiration. These results are attributed to nonrespiratory oxidative processes with a low affinity for O2 involved in root elongation.

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16.
The effects of NaCl and ABA on the respiration of N2-fixing nodules were analysed in common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) inoculated with Rhizobium tropici the reference strain CIAT899. Shoot and nodule growth was more inhibited by NaCl than root growth. The O2 uptake by nodulated roots at 21 kPa O2 was significantly inhibited by salinity. Raising pO2 stimulated nodule respiration more under NaCl treatment than for the control, although it did not compensate totally for the inhibitory effect of NaCl. Short NaCl application was less destructive than long term application. Also, the external application of ABA inhibited nodule respiration, and this inhibition was partly compensated by raising pO2.  相似文献   

17.
Soybean (Glycine max L. cv Williams) seeds were sown in pots containing a 1:1 perlite-vermiculite mixture and grown under greenhouse conditions. Nodules were initiated with a nitrate reductase expressing strain of Rhizobium japonicum, USDA 110, or with nitrate reductase nonexpressing mutants (NR 108, NR 303) derived from USDA 110. Nodules initiated with either type of strain were normal in appearance and demonstrated nitrogenase activity (acetylene reduction). The in vivo nitrate reductase activity of N2-grown nodules initiated with nitrate reductase-negative mutant strains was less than 10% of the activity shown by nodules initiated with the wild-type strain. Regardless of the bacterial strain used for inoculation, the nodule cytosol and the cell-free extracts of the leaves contained both nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase activities. The wild-type bacteroids contained nitrate reductase but not nitrite reductase activity while the bacteroids of strains NR 108 and NR 303 contained neither nitrate reductase nor nitrite reductase activities.

Addition of 20 millimolar KNO3 to bacteroids of the wild-type strain caused a decrease in nitrogenase activity by more than 50%, but the nitrate reductase-negative strains were insensitive to nitrate. The nitrogenase activity of detached nodules initiated with the nitrate reductase-negative mutant strains was less affected by the KNO3 treatment as compared to the wild-type strain; however, the results were less conclusive than those obtained with the isolated bacteroids.

The addition of either KNO3 or KNO2 to detached nodules (wild type) suspended in a semisolid agar nutrient medium caused an inhibition of nitrogenase activity of 50% and 65% as compared to the minus N controls, and provided direct evidence for a localized effect of nitrate and nitrite at the nodule level. Addition of 0.1 millimolar sucrose stimulated nitrogenase activity in the presence or absence of nitrate or nitrite. The sucrose treatment also helped to decrease the level of nitrite accumulated within the nodules.

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18.
Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus is an N2-fixing endophyte isolated from sugarcane. G. diazotrophicus was grown on solid medium at atmospheric partial O2 pressures (pO2) of 10, 20, and 30 kPa for 5 to 6 days. Using a flowthrough gas exchange system, nitrogenase activity and respiration rate were then measured at a range of atmospheric pO2 (5 to 60 kPa). Nitrogenase activity was measured by H2 evolution in N2-O2 and in Ar-O2, and respiration rate was measured by CO2 evolution in N2-O2. To validate the use of H2 production as an assay for nitrogenase activity, a non-N2-fixing (Nif) mutant of G. diazotrophicus was tested and found to have a low rate of uptake hydrogenase (Hup+) activity (0.016± 0.009 μmol of H2 1010 cells−1 h−1) when incubated in an atmosphere enriched in H2. However, Hup+ activity was not detectable under the normal assay conditions used in our experiments. G. diazotrophicus fixed nitrogen at all atmospheric pO2 tested. However, when the assay atmospheric pO2 was below the level at which the colonies had been grown, nitrogenase activity was decreased. Optimal atmospheric pO2 for nitrogenase activity was 0 to 20 kPa above the pO2 at which the bacteria had been grown. As atmospheric pO2 was increased in 10-kPa steps to the highest levels (40 to 60 kPa), nitrogenase activity decreased in a stepwise manner. Despite the decrease in nitrogenase activity as atmospheric pO2 was increased, respiration rate increased marginally. A large single-step increase in atmospheric pO2 from 20 to 60 kPa caused a rapid 84% decrease in nitrogenase activity. However, upon returning to 20 kPa of O2, 80% of nitrogenase activity was recovered within 10 min, indicating a “switch-off/switch-on” O2 protection mechanism of nitrogenase activity. Our study demonstrates that colonies of G. diazotrophicus can fix N2 at a wide range of atmospheric pO2 and can adapt to maintain nitrogenase activity in response to both long-term and short-term changes in atmospheric pO2.  相似文献   

19.
The synthesis and accumulation of nitrite has been suggested as a causative factor in the inhibition of legume nodules supplied with nitrate. Plants were grown in sand culture with a moderate level of nitrate (2.1 to 6.4 millimolar) supplied continuously from seed germination to 30 to 50 days after planting. In a comparison of nitrate treatments, a highly significant negative correlation between nitrite concentration in soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) nodules and nodule fresh weight per shoot dry weight was found even when bacteroids lacked nitrate reductase (NR). However, in a comparison of two Rhizobium japonicum strains, there was only 12% as much nitrite in nodules formed by NRR. japonicum as in nodules formed by NR+R. japonicum, and growth and acetylene reduction activity of both types of nodules was about equally inhibited. In a comparison of eight other NR+ and NRR. japonicum strains, and a comparison of G. max, Phaseolus vulgaris, and Pisum sativum, the concentration of nitrite in nodules was unrelated to nodule weight per plant or to specific acetylene reduction activity. The very small concentration of nitrite found in P. vulgaris nodules (0.05 micrograms NO2-N per gram fresh weight) was probably below that required for the inhibition of nitrogenase based on published in vitro experiments, and yet the specific acetylene reduction activity was inhibited 83% by nitrate. The overall results do not support the idea that nitrite plays a role in the inhibition of nodule growth and nitrogenase activity by nitrate.  相似文献   

20.
Nodulated cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L. Walp. cv Vita 3:Bradyrhizobium CB 756) plants were cultured with their whole root system or crown root nodulation zone maintained for periods from 5 to 69 days after planting in atmospheres containing a range of pO2 (1-80%, v/v) while the rest of the plant grew in normal air. Growth (dry matter yield) and N2 fixation were largely unaffected by pO2 from 10 to 40%. Decrease in fixation at pO2 below 5% was due to lower nodulation and nodule mass and, at pO2 above 60%, to a fall in specific N2-fixing activity of nodules. Root:shoot ratios were significantly lower at pO2 below 2.5%. The effect of pO2 on nitrogenase activity (acetylene reduction), both of whole nodulated root systems and crown root nodulation zones, varied with plant age but was generally lower at supra- and subambient extremes of O2. H2 evolution showed a sharp optimum at 20% O2 but was at most 4% of total nitrogenase activity. The ratio of CO2 evolved to substrate (C2H2+H+) reduced by crown root nodulation zones was constant (6 moles CO2 per mole substrate reduced) from 2.5 to 60% O2 but at levels below 2.5 and above 80% O2 reached values between 20 and 30 moles CO2 per mole substrate reduced. Effects of long-term growth with nonambient pO2 on adaptation and efficiency of functioning of nodules are discussed.  相似文献   

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