نتایج جستجو برای: the highest nitrogen fixing nodules

تعداد نتایج: 16088958  

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 2007
Shino Suzuki Toshihiro Aono Kyung-Bum Lee Tadahiro Suzuki Chi-Te Liu Hiroki Miwa Seiji Wakao Taichiro Iki Hiroshi Oyaizu

The molecular and physiological mechanisms behind the maturation and maintenance of N(2)-fixing nodules during development of symbiosis between rhizobia and legumes still remain unclear, although the early events of symbiosis are relatively well understood. Azorhizobium caulinodans ORS571 is a microsymbiont of the tropical legume Sesbania rostrata, forming N(2)-fixing nodules not only on the ro...

2017
Benoit Daubech Philippe Remigi Ginaini Doin de Moura Marta Marchetti Cécile Pouzet Marie-Christine Auriac Chaitanya S Gokhale Catherine Masson-Boivin Delphine Capela

Mutualism is of fundamental importance in ecosystems. Which factors help to keep the relationship mutually beneficial and evolutionarily successful is a central question. We addressed this issue for one of the most significant mutualistic interactions on Earth, which associates plants of the leguminosae family and hundreds of nitrogen (N2)-fixing bacterial species. Here we analyze the spatio-te...

Journal: :Plant physiology 1982
J D Tjepkema R J Cartica

Parasponia is the first non-legume genus proven to form nitrogen-fixing root nodules induced by rhizobia. Infiltration with India ink demonstrated that intercellular air spaces are lacking in the inner layers of the nodule cortex. Oxygen must diffuse through these layers to reach the cells containing the rhizobia, and it was calculated that most of the gradient in O(2) partial pressure between ...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 2000
C Chaintreuil E Giraud Y Prin J Lorquin A Bâ M Gillis P de Lajudie B Dreyfus

We investigated the presence of endophytic rhizobia within the roots of the wetland wild rice Oryza breviligulata, which is the ancestor of the African cultivated rice Oryza glaberrima. This primitive rice species grows in the same wetland sites as Aeschynomene sensitiva, an aquatic stem-nodulated legume associated with photosynthetic strains of Bradyrhizobium. Twenty endophytic and aquatic iso...

2016
Aarón Barraza Cecilia Contreras-Cubas Georgina Estrada-Navarrete José L. Reyes Marco A. Juárez-Verdayes Nelson Avonce Carmen Quinto Claudia Díaz-Camino Federico Sanchez

Legumes form symbioses with rhizobia, producing nitrogen-fixing nodules on the roots of the plant host. The network of plant signaling pathways affecting carbon metabolism may determine the final number of nodules. The trehalose biosynthetic pathway regulates carbon metabolism and plays a fundamental role in plant growth and development, as well as in plant-microbe interactions. The expression ...

2003
JACQUES VASSE BERNARD DREYFUS GEORGES TRUCHET

The tropical legume Sesbania rostrata can be nodulated by Azorhizobium caulinodans on both its stem and its root system. Here we investigate in detail the process of root nodulation and show that nodules develop exclusively at the base of secondary roots. Intercellular infection leads to the formation of infection pockets, which then give rise to infection threads. Concomitantly with infection,...

2002
Frank R. Minchin

“This paper reports some of the work from my PhD thesis, which was supervised by John Pate. To distinguish the novice from the expert, before joining Pate’s laboratory I had rarely seen legume root nodules. Over the next three years I picked, counted,. weighed, dissected, and chemically analysed a vast number of these strange, pinkish ‘lumps.’ Despite the necessary tedium of such work, the fasc...

Journal: :Journal of nematology 1999
M J Kennedy T L Niblack H B Krishnan

High-performance liquid chromatography and Sinorhizobium fredii USDA191 nodC-lacZ gene fusion were used to monitor changes in the isoflavonoid content of soybean roots infected with Heterodera glycines isolate TN1. Isoflavonoid concentrations in infected roots of both H. glycines-resistant Hartwig and susceptible Essex soybean were two to four-fold higher than those of uninfected roots 2 and 3 ...

2014
Martha E. Trujillo Rodrigo Bacigalupe Petar Pujic Yasuhiro Igarashi Patricia Benito Raúl Riesco Claudine Médigue Philippe Normand Holger Brüggemann

Endophytic microorganisms live inside plants for at least part of their life cycle. According to their life strategies, bacterial endophytes can be classified as "obligate" or "facultative". Reports that members of the genus Micromonospora, Gram-positive Actinobacteria, are normal occupants of nitrogen-fixing nodules has opened up a question as to what is the ecological role of these bacteria i...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2013
Shin Okazaki Takakazu Kaneko Shusei Sato Kazuhiko Saeki

Root-nodule symbiosis between leguminous plants and nitrogen-fixing bacteria (rhizobia) involves molecular communication between the two partners. Key components for the establishment of symbiosis are rhizobium-derived lipochitooligosaccharides (Nod factors; NFs) and their leguminous receptors (NFRs) that initiate nodule development and bacterial entry. Here we demonstrate that the soybean micr...

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