Symbiotic properties of Lotus pedunculitis root nodules induced by Rhizobium loti and Bradyrhizobium sp. (Lotus) |
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Authors: | Carroll P. Vance Paul H. Reibach Clive E. Pankhurst |
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Affiliation: | Rohm and Haas Research Lab., 727 Norristown Road., Spring House, PA 1947, USA |
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Abstract: | 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. |
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Keywords: | CO2fixation efficiency enzymes N assimilation |
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