نتایج جستجو برای: the highest nitrogen fixing nodules

تعداد نتایج: 16088958  

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 2012
Luis E Servín-Garcidueñas Marco A Rogel Ernesto Ormeño-Orrillo Alfonso Delgado-Salinas Julio Martínez-Romero Federico Sánchez Esperanza Martínez-Romero

We present the genome sequence of Rhizobium sp. strain CCGE510, a nitrogen fixing bacterium taxonomically affiliated with the R. leguminosarum-R. etli group, isolated from wild Phaseolus albescens nodules grown in native pine forests in western Mexico. P. albescens is an endangered bean species phylogenetically related to P. vulgaris. In spite of the close host relatedness, Rhizobium sp. CCGE51...

Journal: :Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2004
Michael L Clawson Aaron Bourret David R Benson

Actinomycetes from the genus Frankia induce nitrogen-fixing root nodules on actinorhizal plants in the "core rosid" clade of eudicots. Reported here are nine partial Frankia 16S rRNA gene sequences including the first from host plants of the rosaceous genera Cercocarpus and Chamaebatia, 24 partial glutamine synthetase (GSI; glnA) sequences from Frankia in nodules of 17 of the 23 actinorhizal ge...

2017
Ernesto Ormeño-Orrillo Luis Rey David Durán Carlos A. Canchaya Marco A. Rogel Doris Zúñiga-Dávila Juan Imperial Tomás Ruiz-Argüeso Esperanza Martínez-Romero

Bradyrhizobium paxllaeri is a prevalent species in root nodules of the Lima bean (Phaseolus lunatus) in Peru. LMTR 21T is the type strain of the species and was isolated from a root nodule collected in an agricultural field in the Peruvian central coast. Its 8.29 Mbp genome encoded 7635 CDS, 71 tRNAs and 3 rRNAs genes. All genes required to stablish a nitrogen-fixing symbiosis with its host wer...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1997
P van Rhijn Y Fang S Galili O Shaul N Atzmon S Wininger Y Eshed M Lum Y Li V To N Fujishige Y Kapulnik A M Hirsch

Transcripts for two genes expressed early in alfalfa nodule development (MsENOD40 and MsENOD2) are found in mycorrhizal roots, but not in noncolonized roots or in roots infected with the fungal pathogen Rhizoctonia solani. These same two early nodulin genes are expressed in uninoculated roots upon application of the cytokinin 6-benzylaminopurine. Correlated with the expression of the two early ...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 1968
J V Dahlen R A Parejko P W Wilson

Use of alternate substrates (acetylene, azide, cyanide) for estimating N(2) fixation confirmed that recombined fractions from different bacteria are functional but restricted in complementarity.

Journal: :Plant physiology 2015
Bárbara Nova-Franco Luis P Íñiguez Oswaldo Valdés-López Xochitl Alvarado-Affantranger Alfonso Leija Sara I Fuentes Mario Ramírez Sujay Paul José L Reyes Lourdes Girard Georgina Hernández

Micro-RNAs are recognized as important posttranscriptional regulators in plants. The relevance of micro-RNAs as regulators of the legume-rhizobia nitrogen-fixing symbiosis is emerging. The objective of this work was to functionally characterize the role of micro-RNA172 (miR172) and its conserved target APETALA2 (AP2) transcription factor in the common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris)-Rhizobium etli sy...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1996
C R Anderson E O Jensen D J LLewellyn E S Dennis W J Peacock

We have isolated a new hemoglobin gene from soybean. It is expressed in cotyledons, stems of seedlings, roots, young leaves, and in some cells in the nodules that are associated with the nitrogen-fixing Bradyrhizobium symbiont. This contrasts with the expression of the leghemoglobins, which are active only in the infected cells of the nodules. The deduced protein sequence of the new gene shows ...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2010
Francine Perrine-Walker Patrick Doumas Mikael Lucas Virginie Vaissayre Nicholas J Beauchemin Leah R Band Jérome Chopard Amandine Crabos Geneviève Conejero Benjamin Péret John R King Jean-Luc Verdeil Valérie Hocher Claudine Franche Malcolm J Bennett Louis S Tisa Laurent Laplaze

Actinorhizal symbioses are mutualistic interactions between plants and the soil bacteria Frankia that lead to the formation of nitrogen-fixing root nodules. Little is known about the signaling mechanisms controlling the different steps of the establishment of the symbiosis. The plant hormone auxin has been suggested to play a role. Here we report that auxin accumulates within Frankia-infected c...

Journal: :Botanical Gazette 1908

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