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1.
Summary The first of two major steps in the infection process in roots ofParasponia rigida (Ulmaceae) following inoculation byRhizobium strain RP501 involves the invasion ofRhizobium into the intercellular space system of the root cortex. The earliest sign of root nodule initiation is the presence of clumps of multicellular root hairs (MCRH), a response apparently unique amongRhizobium-root associations. At the same time or shortly after MCRH are first visible, cell divisions are initiated in the outer root cortex of the host plant, always subjacent to the MCRH. No infection threads were observed in root hairs or cortical cells in early stages. Rhizobial entry through the epidermis and into the root cortex was shown to occur via intercellular invasion at the bases of MCRH. The second major step in the infection process is the actual infectionper se of host cells by the rhizobia and formation of typical intracellular infection threads with host cell accommodation. This infection step is probably the beginning of the truly symbiotic relationship in these nodules. Rhizobial invasion and infection are accompanied by host cortical cell divisions which result in a callus-like mass of cortical cells. In addition to infection thread formation in some of these host cortical cells, another type of rhizobial proliferation was observed in which large accumulations of rhizobia in intercellular spaces are associated with host cell wall distortion, deposition of electron-dense material in the walls, and occasional deleterious effects on host cell cytoplasm.  相似文献   

2.
B. G. Turgeon  W. D. Bauer 《Planta》1985,163(3):328-349
The location and topography of infection sites in soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) root hairs spot-inoculated with Rhizobium japonicum have been studied at the ultrastructural level. Infections commonly developed at sites created when the induced deformation of an emerging root hair caused a portion of the root-hair cell wall to press against an adjacent epidermal cell, entrapping rhizobia within the pocket between the two host cells. Infections were initiated by bacteria which became embedded in the mucigel in the enclosed groove. Infection-thread formation in soybean appears to involve degradation of mucigel material and localized disruption of the outer layer of the folded hair cell wall by one or more entrapped rhizobia. Rhizobia at the site of penetration are separated from the host cytoplasm by the host plasmalemma and by a layer of wall material that appears similar or identical to the normal inner layer of the hair cell wall. Proliferation of the bacteria results in an irregular, wall-bound sac near the site of penetration. Tubular infection threads, bounded by wall material of the same appearance as that surrounding the sac, emerge from the sac to carry rhizobia roughly single-file into the hair cell. Growing regions of the infection sac or thread are surrounded by host cytoplasm with high concentrations of organelles associated with synthesis and deposition of membrane and cell-wall material. The threads follow a highly irregular path toward the base of the hair cell. Threads commonly run along the base of the hair cell for some distance, and may branch and penetrate into subjacent cortical cells at several points in a manner analagous to the initial penetration of the root hair.  相似文献   

3.
K. Niehaus  D. Kapp  A. Pühler 《Planta》1993,190(3):415-425
Mutants of the symbiotic soil bacterium Rhizobium meliloti that fail to synthesize the acidic exopolysaccharide EPS I were unable to induce infected root nodules on Medicago sativa L. (alfalfa). These strains, however, elicited pseudonodules that contained no infection threads or bacteroids. The cortical cell walls of the pseudonodules were abnormally thick and incrusted with an autofluorescent material. Parts of these cell walls and wall appositions contained callose. Biochemical analysis of nodules induced by the EPS I-deficient R. meliloti mutant revealed an increase of phenolic compounds bound to the nodule cell walls when compared with the wild-type strain. These microscopic and biochemical data indicated that a general plant defence response against the EPS I-deficient mutant of R. meliloti was induced in alfalfa pseudonodules. Following prolonged incubation with the EPS I-deficient R. meliloti mutant, the defence system of the alfalfa plant could be overcome by the rhizobium mutant. In the case of the delayed infections, the mutants colonized lobes of the pseudonodules, but the infection threads in these nodules had an abnormal morphology. They were greatly enlarged and did not contain the typical gum-like matrix inside. The bacteria were tightly packed. Based on the mechanism of phytopathogenic interactions, we propose that EPS I or a related compound may act as a suppressor of the alfalfa plant defence system, enabling R. meliloti to infect the plant.  相似文献   

4.
The establishment of rhizobia as nitrogen-fixing endosymbionts within legume root nodules requires the disruption of the plant cell wall to breach the host barrier at strategic infection sites in the root hair tip and at points of bacterial release from infection threads (IT) within the root cortex. We previously found that Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii uses its chromosomally encoded CelC2 cellulase to erode the noncrystalline wall at the apex of root hairs, thereby creating the primary portal of its entry into white clover roots. Here, we show that a recombinant derivative of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii ANU843 that constitutively overproduces the CelC2 enzyme has increased competitiveness in occupying aberrant nodule-like root structures on clover that are inefficient in nitrogen fixation. This aberrant symbiotic phenotype involves an extensive uncontrolled degradation of the host cell walls restricted to the expected infection sites at tips of deformed root hairs and significantly enlarged infection droplets at termini of wider IT within the nodule infection zone. Furthermore, signs of elevated plant host defense as indicated by reactive oxygen species production in root tissues were more evident during infection by the recombinant strain than its wild-type parent. Our data further support the role of the rhizobial CelC2 cell wall-degrading enzyme in primary infection, and show evidence of its importance in secondary symbiotic infection and tight regulation of its production to establish an effective nitrogen-fixing root nodule symbiosis.  相似文献   

5.
During the symbiotic interaction between legumes and rhizobia, the host cell plasma membrane and associated plant cell wall invaginate to form a tunnel-like infection thread, a structure in which bacteria divide to reach the plant root cortex. We isolated four Lotus japonicus mutants that make infection pockets in root hairs but form very few infection threads after inoculation with Mesorhizobium loti. The few infection threads that did initiate in the mutants usually did not progress further than the root hair cell. These infection-thread deficient (itd) mutants were unaffected for early symbiotic responses such as calcium spiking, root hair deformation, and curling, as well as for the induction of cortical cell division and the arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis. Complementation tests and genetic mapping indicate that itd2 is allelic to Ljsym7, whereas the itdl, itd3, and itd4 mutations identified novel loci. Bacterial release into host cells did occur occasionally in the itdl, itd2, and itd3 mutants suggesting that some infections may succeed after a long period and that infection of nodule cells could occur normally if the few abnormal infection threads that were formed reached the appropriate nodule cells.  相似文献   

6.
韩善华 《西北植物学报》2007,27(10):2009-2015
用透射电镜对红豆草根瘤侵入线的超微结构进行了观察研究.结果表明,(1)红豆草根瘤侵入线由胞间隙和胞间层细胞壁内陷形成,它们的体积较小,多为管状,基质丰富,含菌很少,常有分叉和1个以上的基质区,而且不同基质区的电子密度、细菌数量和侵入线壁厚度都不相同.(2)红豆草根瘤的侵入线十分丰富,它们不仅大量存在于根瘤分生细胞和幼龄侵染细胞中,也经常出现在发育成熟的侵染细胞内.(3)红豆草根瘤中有一种近似圆形的特殊结构,表面由一层膜包围,其内电子密度较低且无固定结构,且只位于侵染细胞的细胞质中,常在侵入线附近,从不出现在侵染细胞的液泡内和非侵染细胞里面.  相似文献   

7.
Summary The structure of the phloem was studied in stem and leaf ofArtemisia afra Jacq., with particular attention being given to the sieve element walls. Both primary and secondary sieve elements of stem and midvein have nacreous walls, which persist in mature cells. Histochemical tests indicated that the sieve element wall layers contained some pectin. Sieve element wall layers lack lignin. Sieve elements of the minor veins (secondary and tertiary veins) lack nacreous thickening, although their walls may be relatively thick. These walls and those of contiguous transfer cells are rich in pectic substances. Transfer cell wall ingrowths are more highly developed in tertiary than in secondary veins.  相似文献   

8.
The insertion of foreign DNA in plants occurs through a complex interaction between Agrobacteria and host plant cells. The marker gene β-glucuronidase of Escherichia coli and cytological methods were used to characterize competent cells for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation, to study early cellular events of transformation, and to identify the potential host-cell barriers that limit transformation in Arabidopsis thaliana L. Heynh. In cotyledon and leaf explants, competent cells were mesophyll cells that were dedifferentiating, a process induced by wounding and-or phytohormones. The cells were located either at the cut surface or within the explant after phytohormone pretreatment. In root explants, competent cells were present in dedifferentiating pericycle, and were produced only after phytohormone pretreatment. Irrespective of their origin, the competent cells were small, isodiametric with thin primary cell walls, small and multiple vacuoles, prominent nuclei and dense cytoplasm. In both cotyledon and root explants, histological enumeration and β-glucuronidase assays showed that the number of putatively competent cells was increased by preculture treatment, indicating that cell activation and cell division following wounding were insufficient for transformation without phytohormone treatment. Exposure of explants for 48 h to A. tumefaciens produced no characteristic stress response nor any gradual loss of viability nor cell death. However, in the competent cell, association between the polysaccharide of the host cell wall and that of the bacterial filament was frequently observed, indicating that transformation required polysaccharide-to-polysaccharide contact. Flow cytofluorometry and histological analysis showed that abundant transformation required not only cell activation (an early state exhibiting an increase in nuclear protein) but also cell proliferation (which in cotyledon tissue occurred at many ploidy levels). Noncompetent cells could be made competent with the appropriate phytohormone treatments before bacterial infection: this should aid analysis of critical steps in transformation procedures and should facilitate developing new strategies to transform recalcitrant plants.  相似文献   

9.
ACPase activity was localized in the apoplast of pea root nodules under phosphorus deficiency. Pea plants (Pisum sativum L. cv. Sze ciotygodniowy) where inoculated with Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae 248 and were cultured on nitrogen-free medium with phosphate (−N/+P) or phosphate-deficient (−N/−P) one. In comparison with control nodules, P-deficient nodules showed the increase of ACPase activity in plant cell walls and the infection threads. The increase in bacterial ACPase activity under P-deficiency may reflect higher demand for inorganic phosphorus that is necessary for bacteria multiplication within the infection threads. The increase of ACPase activity in nodule apoplast under P stress may enlarge the availability of phosphate for plant and bacteria.  相似文献   

10.
Summary Haustoria ofTriphysaria pusilla andT. versicolor subsp.faucibarbata from a natural habitat were analysed by light and electron microscopy. The keel-shaped edge of the secondary haustorium generally splits the epidermis and cortex of the host root parallel to the root axis, and penetrates to the host vascular tissue. Anticlinally elongated epidermal cells of the haustorium constitute most of the host/parasite interface. Some of these epidermal cells are divided by oblique cell walls. Some of their oblique daughter cells as well as some undivided epidermal cells differentiate into xylem elements. Single epidermal cells occasionally intrude into the vascular tissue of the host and individual host cells can be invaded. The surface area of the plasmalemma in parasitic parenchymatous interface cells is increased by the differentiation of wall labyrinths characteristic of transfer cells and by the development of membrane-lined cytoplasmic tubules or flattened sacs which become embedded in the partly lignified interface cell-wall. Mycorrhizal fungal hyphae enter the xylem bridge in some haustoria. Implications of these observations for the function of the haustorium are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Two different types of contacts (or interfaces) exist between the plant host and the fungus during the vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal symbiosis, depending on whether the fungus is intercellular or intracellular. In the first case, the walls of the partners are in contact, while in the second case the fungal wall is separated from the host cytoplasm by the invaginated host plasmamembrane and by an interfacial material. In order to verify the origin of the interfacial material, affinity techniques which allow identification in situ of cell-wall components, were used. Cellobiohydrolase (CBH I) that binds to cellulose and a monoclonal antibody (JIM 5) that reacts with pectic components were tested on roots ofAllium porrum L. (leek) colonized byGlomus versiforme (Karst.) Berch. Both probes gave a labelling specific for the host cell wall, but each probe labelled over specific and distinct areas. The CBH I-colloidal gold complex heavily labelled the thick epidermal cell walls, whereas JIM 5 only labelled this area weakly. Labelling of the hypodermis was mostly on intercellular material after treatment with JIM 5 and only on the wall when CBH I was used. Suberin bands found on the radial walls were never labelled. Cortical cells were mostly labelled on the middle lamella with JIM 5 and on the wall with CBH I. Gold granules from the two probes were found in interfacial material both near the point where the fungus enters the cell and around the thin hyphae penetrating deep into the cell. The ultrastructural observations demonstrate that cellulose and pectic components have different but complementary distributions in the walls of root cells involved in the mycorrhizal symbiosis. These components show a similar distribution in the interfacial material laid down around the vesicular-arbuscular mycorrhizal fungus indicating that the interfacial material is of host origin.  相似文献   

13.
Esther Gedalovich  J. Kuijt 《Protoplasma》1987,137(2-3):145-155
Summary The viscin tissue ofPhthirusa pyrifolia consists at maturity of two different cell types. The first of these (viscin cells) are greatly elongated and have massive secondary walls, the microfibrils of which are arranged strictly transversely, and are soaked with mucilaginous noncellulosic polysaccharides. The second type of cells (vesicular cells) is much broader, with a very extensive vacuolar system and thin primary cell walls only. Viscin cells are capable of being stretched very greatly, the microfibrils of the secondary wall then becoming oriented more or less longitudinally. In nature, this corresponds to the time of attachement to the host surface, and is followed by drying and, possibly, shortening of the viscin cells. Developmental study of the tissue suggests that Golgi bodies are the major organelles participating in polysaccharide production. The actual mucilage seems to originate from three sources: an unorganized substance which accumulates between the plasmalemma and compound middle lamella; spherical vacuoles which seem to be embedded in the central vacuole, some of which are seen open to the outside of the cell; and from the dissolution at maturity of the compound middle lamella. It is suggested that the two types of cells may correspond to the two major functions of viscin, viz., host attachment (viscin cells) and nutrition of the disseminator (vesicular cells).  相似文献   

14.
We used bright-field, time-lapse video, cross-polarized, phase-contrast, and fluorescence microscopies to examine the influence of isolated chitolipooligosaccharides (CLOSs) from wild-type Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii on development of white clover root hairs, and the role of these bioactive glycolipids in primary host infection. CLOS action caused a threefold increase in the differentiation of root epidermal cells into root hairs. At maturity, root hairs were significantly longer because of an extended period of active elongation without a change in the elongation rate itself. Time-series image analysis showed that the morphological basis of CLOS-induced root hair deformation is a redirection of tip growth displaced from the medial axis as previously predicted. Further studies showed several newly described infection-related root hair responses to CLOSs, including the localized disruption of the normal crystallinity in cell wall architecture and the induction of new infection sites. The application of CLOS also enabled a NodC- mutant of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii to progress further in the infection process by inducing bright refractile spot modifications of the deformed root hair walls. However, CLOSs did not rescue the ability of the NodC- mutant to induce marked curlings or infection threads within root hairs. These results indicate that CLOS Nod factors elicit several host responses that modulate the growth dynamics and symbiont infectibility of white clover root hairs but that CLOSs alone are not sufficient to permit successful entry of the bacteria into root hairs during primary host infection in the Rhizobium-clover symbiosis.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The cultivar specific interaction ofTrifolium subterranean cv. Woogenellup andRhizobium leguminosarum bv.trifolii strain ANU 794 was examined to establish the basis for nodulation failure on this cultivar. Infections were initiated by strain ANU 794 on cv. Woogenellup. Root hair curling, the initiation of infection threads, and cortical cell divisions were evident on the tap root and appeared normal after microscopic observation. However, in most cases, the infection threads stayed confined to the root hairs. No evidence was found for a hypersensitive response by the plant. The progress of infections on the tap roots was different from that on the lateral roots. This was confirmed by the differential tap and lateral root nodulation patterns of the mutants derived from strain ANU 794, which show enhanced nodulation on cv. Woogenellup. On the lateral roots, cortical cell divisions progressed further than those on the tap root and formed macroscopically visible swellings, which could be divided into two morphological classes. In some cases infection threads developed into these primordia but successful nodules were not established. The inhibition of infection appeared to be manifested at two levels: first, on the tap roots in the root hairs, where many of the infection threads are contained and secondly, in the primordia induced on the lateral roots, where the infection threads sometimes penetrate further than the root hair cell but stop in the primordial cells. It appears that an essential factor or trigger in the communication between plant and bacteria is missing or altered, resulting in an array of primordia-structures, which cease to develop.Abbreviations bv biovar - cv cultivar - Fix+ nitrogen fixing - GUS -glucuronidase - Nod+ nodulating - HR hypersensitive response - Km kanamycin - LOSs lipo-oligosaccharides - Sm streptomycin - Sp spectinomycin - X-Gluc 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indonyl--glucuronic acid  相似文献   

16.
17.
This report describes the early cytological events in the infection byRhizobium leguminosarum biovartrifolii of the root hairs ofTrifolium repens seedlings kept alive on agar medium in glass slide culture experiment. The infection threads bearing rhizobia were formed as soon as the epidermal cells began to emerge as root hairs. On the top of some of these infected emerging root hairs, there were smoky, cell-debris-like bodies, which appeared to be derived from the cell wall dug by rhizobia. Similar bodies were also observed in longer root hairs. None of the root hair cells along the length of the roots which contained infection threads were curled or distorted. A substantial number of pink-colored nodules were later formed on the roots with non-curled infected root hairs.  相似文献   

18.
Specific antibodies and enzyme–gold probes were used to study the structure and development of infection threads in nodules induced by Rhizobium leguminosarum on the roots of Vicia, Pisum and Phaseolus. In Pisum nodules, the tubular infection thread wall contains polysaccharides antigenically similar to those of the cell wall, including cellulose, xyloglucan, methyl-esterified pectin and non-esterified pectin, but none of these wall components is present around the infection droplet structures from which bacteria are internalized by plant plasma membrane. As reported previously for pea nodules, the luminal matrix of infection threads and infection droplets contains a plant glycoprotein; this glycoprotein is also secreted by infected and uninfected cortical cells of a Vicia root at the earliest stages of nodule initiation. Synthesis of a transcellular infection thread apparently involves reorganized deposition of components normally targeted to the cell wall, and infection thread growth is orientated anticlinally through the outer cortex in the same plane observed for the deposition of new cell walls following mitosis. Both the development of infection threads in the outer cortex and the initiation of cell division in the inner cortex are preceded by a similar process of cell reactivation involving centralization of nuclei and the development of anticlinal transvacuolar strands. It is therefore suggested that the two Rhizobium-induced processes of infection thread growth and cortical cell division may both be consequences of a similar plant cell response in the inner and outer root cortex, respectively. Phaseolus nodules contained only short intracellular infection structures which terminated within individual cells and contained no luminal matrix material. The differences in infection thread structure between Pisum and Phaseolus nodules may reflect differences in ontogeny between “indeterminate” and “determinate” nodule meristems.  相似文献   

19.
Cona A  Moreno S  Cenci F  Federico R  Angelini R 《Planta》2005,221(2):265-276
Plant polyamine oxidases (PAOs; EC 1.5.3.11) are hydrogen peroxide-producing enzymes supposedly involved in cell-wall differentiation processes and defence responses. Maize (Zea mays L.) PAO (MPAO) is a 53 kDa secretory glycoprotein, abundant in primary and secondary cell walls of several tissues. Using biochemical, histochemical, ultrastructural and immunocytochemical techniques, the distribution and sub-cellular compartmentalisation of MPAO in the primary root and mesocotyl of seedlings at different maturation stages or after growth under varying light conditions were analysed. In apical root tissues, MPAO immunoreactivity was mainly detected in the cytoplasmic compartment, while a lower immunoreactivity was observed in the cell walls. In the more mature, basal part of the root, intense immunogold labelling was found in the primary and secondary walls of protoxylem precursors and vessels, while endodermal cells and living metaxylem precursors were immunopositive both in their walls and in their thin cytoplasmic compartments. A re-distribution of MPAO protein from the cytoplasm toward the primary and secondary walls was also recognised when immunoreactivity of basal root tissues from 3-day-old seedlings was compared with that detected in 11-day-old tissues. Accordingly, biochemical analyses revealed MPAO entrapment in the extracellular matrix of mature tissues. In the mesocotyl, an enrichment of MPAO immunolabelling in the cell wall of protoxylem, metaxylem and epidermal tissues, as a function of light exposure, was observed. Taken together, these data support the hypothesised role of PAOs in cell-wall maturation. Moreover, the relevant intraprotoplasmic MPAO localisation observed mainly in differentiating root tissues suggests an additional role in intracellular production of hydrogen peroxide.Alessandra Cona and Sandra Moreno have contributed equally to this paper.  相似文献   

20.
I. M. Miller  D. D. Baker 《Protoplasma》1985,128(2-3):107-119
Summary A correlated light and electron microscopic study was undertaken of the initiation and development of root nodules of the actinorhizal tree species,Elaeagnus angustifolia L. (Elaeagnaceae).Two pure culturedFrankia strains were used for inoculation of plants in either standing water culture or axenic tube cultures. Unlike the well known root hair infection of other actinorhizal genera such asAlnus orMyrica the mode of infection ofElaeagnus in all cases was by direct intercellular penetration of the epidermis and apoplastic colonization of the root cortex. Root hairs were not involved in this process and were not observed to be deformed or curled in the presence of the actinomyceteFrankia. In response to the invasion of the root, host cells secreted a darkly staining material into the intercellular spaces. The colonizingFrankia grew through this material probably by enzymatic digestion as suggested by clear dissolution zones around the hyphal strands. A nodule primordium was initiated from the root pericycle, well in advance of the colonizingFrankia. No random division of root cortical cells, indicative of prenodule formation was observed inElaeagnus. As the nodule primordium grew in size it was surrounded by tanninised cells of a protoperiderm. The endophyte easily traversed this protoperiderm, and once inside the nodule primordium cortex ramified within the intercellular spaces at multiple cell junctions. Invasion of the nodule cortical cells occurred when a hyphal branch of the endophyte was initiated and grew through the plant cell wall, again by apparent enzymatic digestion. The plant cell plasmalemma of invaded cells always remained intact and numerous secretory vesicles fused with it to encapsulate the advancingFrankia within a fibrous cell wall-like material. Once within the host cell some endophyte cells began to differentiate into characteristic vesicles which are the presumed site of nitrogen fixation. This study clearly demonstrates that alternative developmental pathways exist for the development of actinorhizal nitrogen-fixing root symbioses.  相似文献   

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