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  • Nitrogen fixation  (1)
  • nod genes  (1)
  • 1995-1999  (2)
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  • 1995-1999  (2)
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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-2048
    Keywords: Infection ; Neptunia (root nodules) ; Nitrogen fixation ; Nodulation ; Rhizobium
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We examined the development of the aquatic N2-fixing symbiosis between Rhizobium sp. (itNeptunia) and roots of Neptunia natans L. f. (Druce) (previously N. oleracea Lour.) under natural and laboratory conditions. When grown in its native marsh habitat, this unusual aquatic legume does not develop root hairs, the primary sites of rhizobial infection for most temperate legumes. Under natural conditions, the aquatic plant floats and develops nitrogen-fixing nodules at emergence of lateral roots on the primary root and on adventitious roots at stem nodes, but not from the stem itself. Cytological studies using various microscopies revealed that the mode of root infection involved an intercellular route of entry followed by an intracellular route of dissemination within nodule cells. After colonizing the root surface, the bacteria entered the primary root cortex through natural wounds caused by splitting of the epidermis and emergence of young lateral roots, and then stimulated early development of nodules at the base of such roots. The bacteria entered the nodule through pockets between separated host cells, then spread deeper in the nodule through a narrower intercellular route, and eventually evoked the formation of infection threads that penetrated host cells and spread throughout the nodule tissue. Bacteria were released from infection droplets at unwalled ends of infection threads, became enveloped by peribacteroid membranes, and transformed into enlarged bacteroids within symbiosomes. In older nodules, the bacteria within symbiosomes were embedded in an unusual, extensive fibrillar matrix. Cross-inoculation tests of 18 isolates of rhizobia from nodules of N. natans revealed a host specificity enabling effective nodulation of this aquatic legume, with lesser affinity for Medicago sativa and Ornithopus sp., and an inability to nodulate several other crop legume species. Acetylene reduction (N2 fixation) activity was detected in nodules of N. natans growing in aquatic habitats under natural conditions in Southern India. These studies indicate that a specific group of Rhizobium sp. (Neptunia) occupies a unique ecological niche in aquatic environments by entering into a N2-fixing root-nodule symbiosis with Neptunia natans.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-5036
    Keywords: Acacia ; Faidherbia ; flavonoids ; nod genes ; non-nodulating ; rhizobia
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
    Notes: Abstract Previous work led us to consider the role of nod gene-inducing compounds in related nodulating and non-nodulating Acacia species. Could the nodulation status of the non-nodulating plants be determined by an inability to produce and exude compounds that the related nodulating species were capable of delivering to the rhizobial symbionts? Also, it seemed to have been assumed previously that results gathered for extracts of seedlings or root tissue would reflect the situation for compounds exuded freely into the rhizosphere. The growth medium used in this investigation gave an opportunity to test this theory with the added bonus of allowing root exudates to be collected from a limited number of plants. The two non-nodulating species were found to lack neither the ability to produce potentially inducing compounds nor the means to exude them into the rhizosphere. However, it was demonstrated, through the distribution of potentially inducing compounds within the plants and their exudates, that the components of tissue extractions did not necessarily reflect the components exuded into the rhizosphere.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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