首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Chickpea plants were inoculated with two strains of Mesorhizobium ciceri: local strain (C-15) and non-local strain (CP-36) in order to evaluate plant growth parameters, activities of nitrogenase and antioxidant enzymes under drought stress as well as control condition within 15 days of imposition of drought stress. Biomass production, nodulation, nitrogen fixation and antioxidant enzyme activities under drought condition were compared. Under control condition, symbiotic efficiency in symbiosis formed by C-15 was higher than that in symbiosis derived by CP-36. Although drought stress decreased shoot dry weight, root dry weight, nodule dry weight and nitrogen fixation in both symbioses, the rate of decline in plants inoculated with CP-36 was higher than that in symbiosis chickpea with C-15. Therefore, symbioses showed different tolerance level under drought condition which was essentially correlated with symbiotic performance at non-stressful conditions. Under drought stress, nodular peroxidase (POX) activity increased in both symbioses but was higher in nodules produced by C-15. Ascorbate peroxidase (APX) increased significantly in nodules of symbiosis of chickpea with C-15. Catalase (CAT) and glutation reductase (GR) declined in both symbioses which decline extent in symbiosis with C-15 was lower than that in the nodules of CP-36. These results suggested contribution of rhizobial partner in enhancing the tolerance of symbioses to drought stress, which was related with the increase of antioxidant enzyme activities (APX and POX) under drought conditions.  相似文献   

2.
Common bean plants inoculated with salt-tolerant Rhizobium tropici wild-type strain CIAT899 formed a more active symbiosis than did its decreased salt-tolerance (DST) mutant derivatives (HB8, HB10, HB12 and HB13). The mutants formed partially effective (HB10, HB12) or almost ineffective (HB8, HB13) nodules (Fix(d)) under non-saline conditions. The DST mutant formed nodules that accumulated more proline than did the wild-type nodules, while soluble sugars were accumulated mainly in ineffective nodules. Under salt stress, plant growth, nitrogen fixation, and the activities of the antioxidant defense enzymes of nodules were affected in all symbioses tested. Overall, mutant nodules showed lower antioxidant enzyme activities than wild-type nodules. Levels of nodule catalase appeared to correlate with symbiotic nitrogen-fixing efficiency. Superoxide dismutase and dehydroascorbate reductase seem to function in the molecular mechanisms underlying the tolerance of nodules to salinity.  相似文献   

3.
The nitrogen‐fixing symbiosis of legumes and Rhizobium bacteria is established by complex interactions between the two symbiotic partners. Legume Fix mutants form apparently normal nodules with endosymbiotic rhizobia but fail to induce rhizobial nitrogen fixation. These mutants are useful for identifying the legume genes involved in the interactions essential for symbiotic nitrogen fixation. We describe here a Fix mutant of Lotus japonicus, apn1, which showed a very specific symbiotic phenotype. It formed ineffective nodules when inoculated with the Mesorhizobium loti strain TONO. In these nodules, infected cells disintegrated and successively became necrotic, indicating premature senescence typical of Fix mutants. However, it formed effective nodules when inoculated with the M. loti strain MAFF303099. Among nine different M. loti strains tested, four formed ineffective nodules and five formed effective nodules on apn1 roots. The identified causal gene, ASPARTIC PEPTIDASE NODULE‐INDUCED 1 (LjAPN1), encodes a nepenthesin‐type aspartic peptidase. The well characterized Arabidopsis aspartic peptidase CDR1 could complement the strain‐specific Fix phenotype of apn1. LjAPN1 is a typical late nodulin; its gene expression was exclusively induced during nodule development. LjAPN1 was most abundantly expressed in the infected cells in the nodules. Our findings indicate that LjAPN1 is required for the development and persistence of functional (nitrogen‐fixing) symbiosis in a rhizobial strain‐dependent manner, and thus determines compatibility between M. loti and L. japonicus at the level of nitrogen fixation.  相似文献   

4.
Nitric oxide (NO) is a gaseous signaling molecule with a broad spectrum of regulatory functions in plant growth and development. NO has been found to be involved in various pathogenic or symbiotic plant-microbe interactions. During the last decade, increasing evidence of the occurrence of NO during legume-rhizobium symbioses has been reported, from early steps of plant-bacteria interaction, to the nitrogen-fixing step in mature nodules. This review focuses on recent advances on NO production and function in nitrogen-fixing symbiosis. First, the potential plant and bacterial sources of NO, including NO synthase-like, nitrate reductase or electron transfer chains of both partners, are presented. Then responses of plant and bacterial cells to the presence of NO are presented in the context of the N2-fixing symbiosis. Finally, the roles of NO as either a regulatory signal of development, or a toxic compound with inhibitory effects on nitrogen fixation, or an intermediate involved in energy metabolism, during symbiosis establishment and nodule functioning are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Efficiency of symbiotic nitrogen fixation in legumes depends on bringing together the processes of N2 fixation, assimilation of its products, supply of nitrogenase with energy, and development of nodule tissue and cellular structures. Coordination of these processes could arise from the evolutionary old functions of the nodules associated with deposition of the products of photosynthesis governed by systemic signals traveling between the above-ground organs and the roots. Further increase in symbiotic efficiency was associated with a pronounced ability to fix N2 by intracellular bacteroids that lost capability to propagate (as observed in galegoid legumes from the tribes Viciae, Trifolieae, and Galegae producing indeterminate nodules). However, efficiency of these symbioses is restricted by a slow removal from the nodules of the products of N2 fixation, which are assimilated along the same amide pathway as nitrogen compounds arriving from the soil. In legumes from the tribe Phaseoleae, such a restriction was overcome owing to a particular way of nitrogen assimilation via its incorporation into ureides (in determinate nodules). Development of symbioses where specialization of bacteroids in symbiotic fixation of atmospheric nitrogen is combined with its ureide assimilation will make it possible to produce new forms of plants highly efficient in symbiotic nitrogen fixation.  相似文献   

6.
Antipchuk  A. F.  Kosenko  L. V. 《Microbiology》2004,73(1):51-55
The influence of lipopolysaccharides (LPS), glucans, and their unseparated complexes on nodulation activity of rhizobia and efficiency of their symbioses with pea plants was studied in vegetation tests. Two Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae strains which differed in their symbiotic properties were used: strain 31 (fix+, efficient, moderately virulent, and moderately competitive) and strain 248b (fix, inefficient, highly virulent, and highly competitive). Preparations of LPS–glucan complex and the respective LPS from the highly virulent strain 248b increased the nodulation activity of both strains by 10–26%. Analogous preparations from a less virulent strain 31 did not have this ability. Unseparated LPS–glucan complexes from these strains increased the productivity of plants infected with the efficient strain by 18–23% but did not change it in plants inoculated with the other, inefficient strain. No significant influence of LPS preparations on the symbiosis productivity was observed. Glucans from both strains enhanced the nodulation ability of the highly virulent strain by 36–56%. In addition, treatment of pea plants with glucan from strain 248b increased nitrogen fixation by root nodules by 27% in plants inoculated with strain 31. In general, the formation and efficiency of the symbiosis of R. leguminosarum bv. viciae with pea plants was more influenced by preparations from strain 248b, highly virulent but deficient in nitrogen fixation, than by preparations from the nitrogen fixation–proficient but less virulent strain 31.  相似文献   

7.
J. Evans 《Plant and Soil》1982,66(3):439-442
Summary The effect of mineral nitrogen on establishment and activity of symbioses between soybean and several strains ofRhizobium japonicum and on the establishment of nodules ofR. japonicum isolated from nodules of field crops is studied. All strains were highly susceptible to the effects of 200 ppm NO3–N on the establishment of symbiosis; 50 ppm NO3–N had little effect. Response of symbioses establishhed in the absence of mineral N to short term exposure to nitrate or ammonium varied significantly between strains. Nodule isolates from soybean crops growing in nitrifying soil were no less susceptible to the inhibitory effects of mineral N on nodule formation than a laboratory culture of the commercial inoculant strain.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract

Legume plants enter two important endosymbioses – with soil fungi, forming phosphorus acquiring arbuscular mycorrhiza (AM), and with nitrogen-fixing bacteria, leading to the formation of nitrogen-fixing root nodules. Both symbioses have been studied extensively because these symbioses have great potential for agricultural applications. Although 80% of all living land plants form AM, the nitrogen-fixing root nodule symbiosis with rhizobia is almost exclusively restricted to legumes. Despite varying degree of differences in the morphological responses induced by both endosymbionts in the host plants, significant similarities in the development of both fungal and bacterial symbioses have been reported. The signal perception and signal transduction cascades that initiate nodulation and mycorrhization in legumes partially overlap. Legume genes have been identified that are required for the establishment of both AM and root nodule symbiosis and are referred to as the common SYM genes. Genetic dissection of the common SYM signal transduction pathway required for bacterial and fungal root endosymbiosis has not only unraveled the players involved but also provided a first glimpse at conservation and specialization of signaling cascades essential for nodulation and mycorrhiza development. Based on the observation of common signaling cascades, it is tempting to speculate that the root nodule symbiosis, where fossil records date back to the late Cretaceaous, adopted and subsequently modified more ancient signal transduction pathways leading to AM formation, having already been in place 400 million years ago. This review discusses the common aspects of recognition of mycorrhizal fungi and Rhizobium by the host, and further signal transduction that leads to an effective symbiosis.  相似文献   

9.
Random transposon Tn5 mutagenesis of Bradyrhizobium sp. (Arachis) strain NC92, a member of the cowpea cross-inoculation group, was carried out, and kanamycin-resistant transconjugants were tested for their symbiotic phenotype on three host plants: groundnut, siratro, and pigeonpea. Two nodulation (Nod- phenotype) mutants were isolated. One is unable to nodulate all three hosts and appears to contain an insertion in one of the common nodulation genes (nodABCD); the other is a host-specific nodulation mutant that fails to nodulate pigeonpea, elicits uninvaded nodules on siratro, and elicits normal, nitrogen-fixing nodules on groundnut. In addition, nine mutants defective in nitrogen fixation (Fix- phenotype) were isolated. Three fail to supply symbiotically fixed nitrogen to all three host plants. Surprisingly, nodules elicited by one of these mutants exhibit high levels of acetylene reduction activity, demonstrating the presence of the enzyme nitrogenase. Three more mutants have partially effective phenotypes (Fix +/-) in symbiosis with all three host plants. The remaining three mutants fail to supply fixed nitrogen to one of the host plants tested while remaining partially or fully effective on the other two hosts; two of these mutants are Fix- in pigeonpea and Fix +/- on groundnut and on siratro, whereas the other one is Fix- on groundnut but Fix+ on siratro and on pigeonpea. These latter mutants also retain significant nodule acetylene reduction activity, even in the ineffective symbioses. Such bacterial host-specific fixation (Hsf) mutants have not previously been reported.  相似文献   

10.
Vance, C. P., Reibach, P. H. and Pankhurst, C. E. 1987. Symbiotic properties of Lotus pedunculatus root nodules induced by Rhizobium loti and Bradyrhizobium sp. ( Lotus ).
Symbiotic properties of root nodules were evaluated in glasshouse-grown Lotus pedunculatus Cav. cv. Maku inoculated with either a fast-growing Rhizobium loti strain NZP2037 or a slow-growing Bradyrhizobium sp. ( Lotus ) strain CC814s. Although the nodule mass of plants inoculated with NZP2037 was twice that of plants inoculated with CC814s, the yield of NZP2037 shoots and roots was 50% that of CC814s shoots and roots. Nodules induced by Bradyrhizobium fixed substantially more N than nodules induced by R. loti. Glucose requirements [mol glucose (mol N2 fixed)-1] of nodules induced by CC814s and NZP2037 were 7.1 and 16.6, respectively. Nodule enzymes of carbon and nitrogen assimilation reflected the disparity of the two sym-bioses. Xylem sap of the symbiosis with the higher yield contained a higher concentration of asparagine [9.86 μmol (ml xylem sap)'] than did the lower yielding symbiosis [5.80 umol (ml xylem sap)"']. Nodule CO2 fixation was directly linked to nodule N assimilation in both symbioses. The results indicate that the difference between the two symbioses extend to nodule N and C assimilation and whole plant N transport. The data support a role for host plant modulation of bacterial efficiency and assimilation of fixed N.  相似文献   

11.
The essentiality of boron (B) for nitrogen fixation in heterocystous cyanobacteria and rhizobial symbioses has been widely established. However, nothing is known about the possible involvement of the micronutrient in actinorhizal symbioses. Therefore, the effect of boron (B) deficiency on the establishment of the Discaria trinervis-Frankia BCU110501 symbiosis was investigated. Nodulation was diminished in B-deficient D. trinervis or in plants inoculated with Frankia grown in the absence of B. These poorly nodulated plants showed a reduction of shoot and root weight and small size. Because depletion of the micronutrient during growth of the actinomycete altered the infection capacity of Frankia , we also studied growth, structure and nitrogen fixation of free-living Frankia BCU110501. Growth was delayed in B-deficient BAP media (+N cultures), and completely inhibited in B-deprived N-free BAP media (–N cultures), suggesting that B is required to enhance growth of Frankia and essential for the development of nitrogen fixing activity. Ultrastructural study of B-deficient cells showed an alteration of filament walls both in +N and especially in –N cultures, indicating a possible role of the microelement in the maintenance of these structures. Moreover, the stability of vesicle envelopes was impaired in the absence of B and, hence, nitrogenase occurrence and nitrogen fixation were totally absent. The results show that B is required for both partners to establish an effective symbiosis.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
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   

14.
Symbiotic associations between leguminous plants and nitrogen‐fixing rhizobia culminate in the formation of specialized organs called root nodules, in which the rhizobia fix atmospheric nitrogen and transfer it to the plant. Efficient biological nitrogen fixation depends on metabolites produced by and exchanged between both partners. The Medicago truncatulaSinorhizobium meliloti association is an excellent model for dissecting this nitrogen‐fixing symbiosis because of the availability of genetic information for both symbiotic partners. Here, we employed a powerful imaging technique – matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI)/mass spectrometric imaging (MSI) – to study metabolite distribution in roots and root nodules of M. truncatula during nitrogen fixation. The combination of an efficient, novel MALDI matrix [1,8–bis(dimethyl‐amino) naphthalene, DMAN] with a conventional matrix 2,5–dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) allowed detection of a large array of organic acids, amino acids, sugars, lipids, flavonoids and their conjugates with improved coverage. Ion density maps of representative metabolites are presented and correlated with the nitrogen fixation process. We demonstrate differences in metabolite distribution between roots and nodules, and also between fixing and non‐fixing nodules produced by plant and bacterial mutants. Our study highlights the benefits of using MSI for detecting differences in metabolite distributions in plant biology.  相似文献   

15.
Reddy  P.M.  Ladha  J.K.  So  R.B.  Hernandez  R.J.  Ramos  M.C.  Angeles  O.R.  Dazzo  F.B.  de Bruijn  Frans J. 《Plant and Soil》1997,194(1-2):81-98
Legume-rhizobial interactions culminate in the formation of structures known as nodules. In this specialized niche, rhizobia are insulated from microbial competition and fix nitrogen which becomes directly available to the legume plant. It has been a long-standing goal in the field of biological nitrogen fixation to extend the nitrogen-fixing symbiosis to non-nodulated cereal plants, such as rice. To achieve this goal, extensive knowledge of the legume-rhizobia symbioses should help in formulating strategies for developing potential rice-rhizobia symbioses or endophytic interactions. As a first step to assess opportunities for developing a rice-rhizobia symbiosis, we evaluated certain aspects of rice-rhizobia associations to determine the extent of predisposition of rice roots for forming an intimate association with rhizobia. Our studies indicate that: a. Rice root exudates do not activate the expression of nodulation genes such as nodY of Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA110, nodA of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii, or nodSU of Rhizobium. sp. NGR234; b. Neither viable wild-type rhizobia, nor purified chitolipooligosaccharide (CLOS) Nod factors elicit root hair deformation or true nodule formation in rice; c. Rhizobia-produced indole-3-acetic acid, but neither trans-zeatin nor CLOS Nod factors, seem to promote the formation of thick, short lateral roots in rice; d. Rhizobia develop neither the symbiont-specific pattern of root hair attachment nor extensive cellulose microfibril production on the rice root epidermis; e. A primary mode of rhizobial invasion of rice roots is through cracks in the epidermis and fissures created during emergence of lateral roots; f. This infection process is nod-gene independent, nonspecific, and does not involve the formation of infection threads; g. Endophytic colonization observed so far is restricted to intercellular spaces or within host cells undergoing lysis. h. The cortical sclerenchymatous layer containing tightly packed, thick walled fibers appears to be a significant barrier that restricts rhizobial invasion into deeper layers of the root cortex. Therefore, we conclude that the molecular and cell biology of the Rhizobium-rice association differs in many respects from the biology underlying the development of root nodules in the Rhizobium-legume symbiosis.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Experiments were done to test whether N fixation is more sensitive to high soil temperatures in common bean than in cowpea or soybean. Greenhouse experiments compared nodulation, nitrogenase activity, growth and nitrogen accumulation of several host/strain combinations of common bean with the other grain legumes and with N-fertilization, at various root temperatures. Field experiments compared relative N-accumulation (in symbiotic relative to N-fertilized plants) of common bean with cowpea under different soil thermal regimes. N-fertilized beans were unaffected by the higher temperatures, but nitrogen accumulation by symbiotic beans was always more sensitive to high root temperatures (33°C, 33/28°C, 34/28°C compared with 28°C) than were cowpea and soybean symbiosis. Healthy bean nodules that had developed at low temperatures functioned normally in acetylene reduction tests done at 35°C. High temperatures caused little or no suppression of nodule number. However, bean nodules produced at high temperatures were small and had low specific activity. ForP. vulgaris some tolerance to high temperature was observed among rhizobium strains (e.g., CIAT 899 was tolerant) but not among host cultivars. Heat tolerance ofP. acutifolius andP. lunatus symbioses was similar to that of cowpea and soybean. In the field, high surface soil temperatures did not reduce N accumulation in symbiotic beans more than in cowpea, probably because of compensatory nodulation in the deeper and cooler parts of the soil.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The influence of combined nitrogen (as ammonium nitrate) on the symbiotic performances of selected bacterial associations of four legumes was examined using sand culture.In barrel medic (Medicago tribuloides Desr.) and vetch (Vicia sativa L. andV. atropurpurea Desf.) bacterial partnerships of a host plant varied greatly in their nodulation responses to a range of amounts of nitrogen applied at sowing. Some bacterial strains exhibited varying degrees of stimulation of nodule number, growth and fixation by low or medium amounts of nitrogen. Higher levels of combined nitrogen depressed symbiosis. Other strain responses showed a severe restriction of symbiosis with any amount of added nitrogen.Seasonal influences conditioned symbiotic responses to combined nitrogen in an association of cowpea (Vigna sinensis End.) With a summer sowing small amounts of ammonium nitrate added at sowing benefited later symbiotic development. No such stimulation was evident in an autumn sowing and symbiotic injury from high levels of nitrogen was greater than in the summer sowing.The developing association of cowpea was found to be most sensitive to ammonium nitrate added just as the first leaves unfolded. Here damage was manifest in a permanent elevation of the top: root ratio with subnormal growth and functioning of nodules. Greatest benefit from added inorganic nitrogen followed applications made as the first nodules appeared on the primary root. In this case added combined nitrogen acted as an investment providing returns in additional fixation equivalent to 5–10 times the amount of nitrogen originally fed to the seedling and representing some 50 per cent greater total fixation than in minus-nitrogen controls.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract Two strains of Bradyrhizobium sp., Aust 13C and Aust 11C, were dually or singly inoculated with an ectomycorrhizal fungus, Pisolithus albus to assess the interactions between ectomycorrhizal symbiosis and the nodulation process in glasshouse conditions. Sequencing of strains Aust 13C and Aust 11C confirmed their previous placement in the genus Bradyrhizobium. After 4 months culture, the ectomycorrhizal symbiosis promoted plant growth and the nodulation process of both Bradyrhizobium strains, singly or dually inoculated. PCR/RFLP analysis of the nodules randomly collected in each treatment with Aust 13C and/or Aust 11C: (1) showed that all the nodules exhibited the same patterns as those of the Bradyrhizobium strains, and (2) did not detect contaminant rhizobia. When both Bradyrhizobium isolates were inoculated together, but without P. albus IR100, Aust 11C was recorded in 13% of the treated nodules compared to 87% for Aust 13C, whereas Aust 11C and Aust 13C were represented in 20 and 80% of the treated nodules, respectively, in the ectomycorrhizal treatment. Therefore Aust 13C had a high competitive ability and a great persistence in soil. The presence of the fungus did not significantly influence the frequencies of each Bradyrhizobium sp. root nodules. Although the mechanisms remain unknown, these results showed that the ectomycorrhizal and biological nitrogen-fixing symbioses were very dependent on each other. From a practical point of view, the role of ectomycorrhizal symbiosis is of great importance to N2 fixation and, consequently, these kinds of symbiosis must be associated in any controlled inoculation.  相似文献   

19.
The effect of nitrate on N2 fixation and the assimilation of fixed N2 in legume nodules was investigated by supplying nitrate to well established soybean (Glycine max L. Merr. cv Bragg)-Rhizobium japonicum (strain 3I1b110) symbioses. Three different techniques, acetylene reduction, 15N2 fixation and relative abundance of ureides ([ureides/(ureides + nitrate + α-amino nitrogen)] × 100) in xylem exudate, gave similar results for the effect of nitrate on N2 fixation by nodulated roots. After 2 days of treatment with 10 millimolar nitrate, acetylene reduction by nodulated roots was inhibited by 48% but there was no effect on either acetylene reduction by isolated bacteroids or in vitro activity of nodule cytoplasmic glutamine synthetase, glutamine oxoglutarate aminotransferase, xanthine dehydrogenase, uricase, or allantoinase. After 7 days, acetylene reduction by isolated bacteroids was almost completely inhibited but, except for glutamine oxoglutarate aminotransferase, there was still no effect on the nodule cytoplasmic enzymes. It was concluded that, when nitrate is supplied to an established symbiosis, inhibition of nodulated root N2 fixation precedes the loss of the potential of bacteroids to fix N2. This in turn precedes the loss of the potential of nodules to assimilate fixed N2.  相似文献   

20.
Products of the nodule cytosol in vivo dark [14C]CO2 fixation were detected in the plant cytosol as well as in the bacteroids of pea (Pisum sativum L. cv “Bodil”) nodules. The distribution of the metabolites of the dark CO2 fixation products was compared in effective (fix+) nodules infected by a wild-type Rhizobium leguminosarum (MNF 300), and ineffective (fix) nodules of the R. leguminosarum mutant MNF 3080. The latter has a defect in the dicarboxylic acid transport system of the bacterial membrane. The 14C incorporation from [14C]CO2 was about threefold greater in the wild-type nodules than in the mutant nodules. Similarly, in wild-type nodules the in vitro phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity was substantially greater than that of the mutant. Almost 90% of the 14C label in the cytosol was found in organic acids in both symbioses. Malate comprised about half of the total cytosol organic acid content on a molar basis, and more than 70% of the cytosol radioactivity in the organic acid fraction was detected in malate in both symbioses. Most of the remaining 14C was contained in the amino acid fraction of the cytosol in both symbioses. More than 70% of the 14C label found in the amino acids of the cytosol was incorporated in aspartate, which on a molar basis comprised only about 1% of the total amino acid pool in the cytosol. The extensive 14C labeling of malate and aspartate from nodule dark [14C]CO2 fixation is consistent with the role of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxlase in nodule dark CO2 fixation. Bacteroids from the effective wild-type symbiosis accumulated sevenfold more 14C than did the dicarboxylic acid transport defective bacteroids. The bacteroids of the effective MNF 300 symbiosis contained the largest proportion of the incorporated 14C in the organic acids, whereas ineffective MNF 3080 bacteroids mainly contained 14C in the amino acid fraction. In both symbioses a larger proportion of the bacteroid 14C label was detected in malate and aspartate than their corresponding proportions of the organic acids and amino acids on a molar basis. The proportion of 14C label in succinate, 2-oxogultarate, citrate, and fumarate in the bacteroids of the wild type greatly exceeded that of the dicarboxylate uptake mutant. The results indicate a central role for nodule cytosol dark CO2 fixation in the supply of the bacteroids with dicarboxylic acids.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号