نتایج جستجو برای: root nodulation

تعداد نتایج: 141078  

Journal: :The Plant cell 2000
R Catoira C Galera F de Billy R V Penmetsa E P Journet F Maillet C Rosenberg D Cook C Gough J Dénarié

Rhizobium nodulation (Nod) factors are lipo-chitooligosaccharides that act as symbiotic signals, eliciting several key developmental responses in the roots of legume hosts. Using nodulation-defective mutants of Medicago truncatula, we have started to dissect the genetic control of Nod factor transduction. Mutants in four genes (DMI1, DMI2, DMI3, and NSP) were pleiotropically affected in Nod fac...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2008
Hassen Gherbi Katharina Markmann Sergio Svistoonoff Joan Estevan Daphné Autran Gabor Giczey Florence Auguy Benjamin Péret Laurent Laplaze Claudine Franche Martin Parniske Didier Bogusz

Root endosymbioses vitally contribute to plant nutrition and fitness worldwide. Nitrogen-fixing root nodulation, confined to four plant orders, encompasses two distinct types of associations, the interaction of legumes (Fabales) with rhizobia bacteria and actinorhizal symbioses, where the bacterial symbionts are actinomycetes of the genus Frankia. Although several genetic components of the host...

Journal: :The Plant cell 2008
Tatiana Vernié Sandra Moreau Françoise de Billy Julie Plet Jean-Philippe Combier Christian Rogers Giles Oldroyd Florian Frugier Andreas Niebel Pascal Gamas

Mechanisms regulating legume root nodule development are still poorly understood, and very few regulatory genes have been cloned and characterized. Here, we describe EFD (for ethylene response factor required for nodule differentiation), a gene that is upregulated during nodulation in Medicago truncatula. The EFD transcription factor belongs to the ethylene response factor (ERF) group V, which ...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2011
Kiwamu Tanaka Cuong T Nguyen Marc Libault Jianlin Cheng Gary Stacey

Nitrogen is an essential nutrient for plant growth. In the Rhizobium-legume symbiosis, root nodules are the sites of bacterial nitrogen fixation, in which atmospheric nitrogen is converted into a form that plants can utilize. While recent studies suggested an important role for the soybean (Glycine max) ecto-apyrase GS52 in rhizobial root hair infection and root nodule formation, precisely how ...

Journal: :Journal of experimental botany 2015
Carolien De Cuyper Justine Fromentin Rosita Endah Yocgo Annick De Keyser Bruno Guillotin Karl Kunert François-Didier Boyer Sofie Goormachtig

In the rhizosphere, strigolactones not only act as crucial signalling molecules in the communication of plants with parasitic weeds and arbuscular mycorrhiza, but they also play a key role in regulating different aspects of the root system. Here we investigated how strigolactones influence the root architecture of Medicago truncatula. We provide evidence that addition of the synthetic strigolac...

Journal: :The Plant cell 2006
Nancy A Eckardt

The plant hormone cytokinin is implicated in the control of root architecture and development, including legume root nodulation. Gonzalez-Rizzo et al. (pages 2680–2693) identified a Medicago truncatula homolog of Arabidopsis, CYTOKININ RESPONSE1 (CRE1), which encodes a cytokinin receptor histidine kinase, and made use of RNA interference of Mt CRE1 to investigate the role of cytokinin in the no...

2006
Nancy A. Eckardt

The plant hormone cytokinin is implicated in the control of root architecture and development, including legume root nodulation. Gonzalez-Rizzo et al. (pages 2680–2693) identified a Medicago truncatula homolog of Arabidopsis, CYTOKININ RESPONSE1 (CRE1), which encodes a cytokinin receptor histidine kinase, and made use of RNA interference of Mt CRE1 to investigate the role of cytokinin in the no...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2007
John F Marsh Alexandra Rakocevic Raka M Mitra Lysiane Brocard Jongho Sun Alexis Eschstruth Sharon R Long Michael Schultze Pascal Ratet Giles E D Oldroyd

The symbiotic association between legumes and nitrogen-fixing bacteria collectively known as rhizobia results in the formation of a unique plant root organ called the nodule. This process is initiated following the perception of rhizobial nodulation factors by the host plant. Nod factor (NF)-stimulated plant responses, including nodulation-specific gene expression, is mediated by the NF signali...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2017
Sonali Roy Fran Robson Jodi Lilley Cheng-Wu Liu Xiaofei Cheng Jiangqi Wen Simon Walker Jongho Sun Donna Cousins Caitlin Bone Malcolm J Bennett J Allan Downie Ranjan Swarup Giles Oldroyd Jeremy D Murray

Most legume plants can form nodules, specialized lateral organs that form on roots, and house nitrogen-fixing bacteria collectively called rhizobia. The uptake of the phytohormone auxin into cells is known to be crucial for development of lateral roots. To test the role of auxin influx in nodulation we used the auxin influx inhibitors 1-naphthoxyacetic acid (1-NOA) and 2-NOA, which we found red...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید