نتایج جستجو برای: rhizobium etli

تعداد نتایج: 5229  

2016
Benoît Lacroix Vitaly Citovsky

Different strains and species of the soil phytopathogen Agrobacterium possess the ability to transfer and integrate a segment of DNA (T-DNA) into the genome of their eukaryotic hosts, which is mainly mediated by a set of virulence (vir) genes located on the bacterial Ti-plasmid that also contains the T-DNA. To date, Agrobacterium is considered to be unique in its capacity to mediate genetic tra...

Journal: :PLoS ONE 2008
Lisa C. Crossman Santiago Castillo-Ramírez Craig McAnnula Luis Lozano Georgios S. Vernikos José L. Acosta Zara F. Ghazoui Ismael Hernández-González Georgina Meakin Alan W. Walker Michael F. Hynes J. Peter W. Young J. Allan Downie David Romero Andrew W. B. Johnston Guillermo Dávila Julian Parkhill Víctor González

This work centres on the genomic comparisons of two closely-related nitrogen-fixing symbiotic bacteria, Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar viciae 3841 and Rhizobium etli CFN42. These strains maintain a stable genomic core that is also common to other rhizobia species plus a very variable and significant accessory component. The chromosomes are highly syntenic, whereas plasmids are related by fewer ...

Journal: :Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions® 2000

Journal: :PLoS Computational Biology 2007
Osbaldo Resendis-Antonio Jennifer L. Reed Sergio Encarnación-Guevara Julio Collado-Vides Bernhard O. Palsson

Rhizobiaceas are bacteria that fix nitrogen during symbiosis with plants. This symbiotic relationship is crucial for the nitrogen cycle, and understanding symbiotic mechanisms is a scientific challenge with direct applications in agronomy and plant development. Rhizobium etli is a bacteria which provides legumes with ammonia (among other chemical compounds), thereby stimulating plant growth. A ...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 1996
S Luka E J Patriarca A Riccio M Iaccarino R Defez

Rhizobium bacteria fix atmospheric nitrogen during symbiosis with legume plants only after bacterial division is arrested. The role of the major vegetative sigma factor, SigA, utilized by Rhizobium bacteria during symbiosis is unknown. By using PCR technology, a portion of the sigA gene corresponding to domain II was directly amplified from Rhizobium etli total DNA by using two primers designed...

Journal: :International journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology 2000
A Diouf P de Lajudie M Neyra K Kersters M Gillis E Martinez-Romero M Gueye

Fifty-eight new isolates were obtained from root nodules of common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) cultivated in soils originating from different agroecological areas in Senegal and Gambia (West Africa). A polyphasic approach including both phenotypic and genotypic techniques was used to study the diversity of the 58 Rhizobium isolates and to determine their taxonomic relationships with reference str...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 2010
Ramakrishnan Karunakaran Andreas F Haag Alison K East Vinoy K Ramachandran Jurgen Prell Euan K James Marco Scocchi Gail P Ferguson Philip S Poole

BacA is an integral membrane protein, the mutation of which leads to increased resistance to the antimicrobial peptides bleomycin and Bac7(1-35) and a greater sensitivity to SDS and vancomycin in Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae, R. leguminosarum bv. phaseoli, and Rhizobium etli. The growth of Rhizobium strains on dicarboxylates as a sole carbon source was impaired in bacA mutants but was ove...

Journal: :International journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology 2015
Renan Augusto Ribeiro Talita Busulini Martins Ernesto Ormeño-Orrillo Jakeline Renata Marçon Delamuta Marco Antonio Rogel Esperanza Martínez-Romero Mariangela Hungria

There are two major centres of genetic diversification of common bean (Phaseolus vilgaris L.), the Mesoamerican and the Andean, and the legume is capable of establishing nitrogen-fixing symbioses with several rhizobia; Rhizobium etli seems to be the dominant species in both centres. Another genetic pool of common bean, in Peru and Ecuador, is receiving increasing attention, and studies of micro...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 2005
Daniel Pérez-Mendoza Edgardo Sepúlveda Victoria Pando Socorro Muñoz Joaquina Nogales José Olivares Maria J Soto José A Herrera-Cervera David Romero Susana Brom Juan Sanjuán

An analysis of the conjugative transfer of pRetCFN42d, the symbiotic plasmid (pSym) of Rhizobium etli, has revealed a novel gene, rctA, as an essential element of a regulatory system for silencing the conjugative transfer of R. etli pSym by repressing the transcription of conjugal transfer genes in standard laboratory media. The rctA gene product lacks sequence conservation with other proteins ...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید