Does Dryas integrifolia fix nitrogen?

Botany ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 87 (11) ◽  
pp. 1106-1109 ◽  
Author(s):  
John H. Markham

Symbiotic nitrogen fixation is found in plant taxa that also include non-nitrogen-fixing members. Strong evidence for the occurrence of nitrogen fixation comes from physiological measurements and the identification of the nitrogen fixing symbiont. This evidence has been provided for Dryas drummondii Richardson ex Hook. in the Rosaceae. However, while there have been numerous references to the nitrogen fixing ability of Dryas integrifolia Vahl., they can all be traced to a single report that did not provide strong evidence for nitrogen fixation. My attempts to establish nitrogen fixing nodules on vegetatively propagated plants from the field, or seedlings of D. integrifolia, using three different sources of Frankia , all failed. Since other host plants ( Alnus viridis (Chaix) DC. subsp. crispa (Aiton) Turrill and Purshia tridentata (Pursh.) DC.) did produce nitrogen-fixing nodules under the same growth conditions, the ability of D. integrifolia to fix nitrogen should be considered suspect.

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 2002-2014
Author(s):  
Ling-Ling Yang ◽  
Zhao Jiang ◽  
Yan Li ◽  
En-Tao Wang ◽  
Xiao-Yang Zhi

Abstract Rhizobia are soil bacteria capable of forming symbiotic nitrogen-fixing nodules associated with leguminous plants. In fast-growing legume-nodulating rhizobia, such as the species in the family Rhizobiaceae, the symbiotic plasmid is the main genetic basis for nitrogen-fixing symbiosis, and is susceptible to horizontal gene transfer. To further understand the symbioses evolution in Rhizobiaceae, we analyzed the pan-genome of this family based on 92 genomes of type/reference strains and reconstructed its phylogeny using a phylogenomics approach. Intriguingly, although the genetic expansion that occurred in chromosomal regions was the main reason for the high proportion of low-frequency flexible gene families in the pan-genome, gene gain events associated with accessory plasmids introduced more genes into the genomes of nitrogen-fixing species. For symbiotic plasmids, although horizontal gene transfer frequently occurred, transfer may be impeded by, such as, the host’s physical isolation and soil conditions, even among phylogenetically close species. During coevolution with leguminous hosts, the plasmid system, including accessory and symbiotic plasmids, may have evolved over a time span, and provided rhizobial species with the ability to adapt to various environmental conditions and helped them achieve nitrogen fixation. These findings provide new insights into the phylogeny of Rhizobiaceae and advance our understanding of the evolution of symbiotic nitrogen fixation.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Χρυσάνθη Καλλονιάτη

Symbiotic nitrogen fixation in legumes takes place in specialized organs called nodules,which become the main source of assimilated nitrogen for the whole plant. Symbiotic nitro‐gen fixation requires exquisite integration of plant and bacterial metabolism and involvesglobal changes in gene expression and metabolite accumulation in both rhizobia and thehost plant. In order to study the metabolic changes mediated by symbiotic nitrogen fixationon a whole‐plant level, metabolite levels were profiled by gas chromatography–mass spec‐trometry in nodules and non‐symbiotic organs of Lotus japonicus plants uninoculated or in‐oculated with M. loti wt,  ΔnifA or  ΔnifH fix‐ strains. Furthermore, transcriptomic andbiochemical approaches were combined to study sulfur metabolism in nodules, its link tosymbiotic nitrogen fixation, and the effect of nodules on whole‐plant sulfur partitioning andmetabolism. It is well established that nitrogen and sulfur (S) metabolism are tightly en‐twined and sulfur is required for symbiotic nitrogen fixation, however, little is known aboutthe molecular and biochemical mechanisms governing sulfur uptake and assimilation duringsymbiotic nitrogen fixation. Transcript profiling in Lotus japonicus was combined with quan‐tification of S‐metabolite contents and APR activity in nodules and in non‐symbiotic organsof plants uninoculated or inoculated with M. loti wt, ΔnifA or ΔnifH fix‐ strains. Moreover,sulfate uptake and its distribution into different plant organs were analyzed and 35S‐flux intodifferent S‐pools was monitored. Metabolite profiling revealed that symbiotic nitrogen fixa‐tion results in dramatic changes of many aspects of primary and secondary metabolism innodules which leads to global reprogramming of metabolism of the model legume on awhole‐plant level. Moreover, our data revealed that nitrogen fixing nodules represent athiol‐rich organ. Their high APR activity and 35S‐flux into cysteine and its metabolites in com‐bination with the transcriptional up‐regulation of several genes involved in sulfur assimila‐tion highlight the function of nodules as a new site of sulfur assimilation. The higher thiolcontent observed in non‐symbiotic organs of nitrogen fixing plants in comparison touninoculated plants cannot be attributed to local biosynthesis, indicating that nodules couldserve as a novel source of reduced sulfur for the plant, which triggers whole‐plant repro‐gramming of sulfur metabolism. Interestingly, the changes in metabolite profiling and theenhanced thiol biosynthesis in nodules and their impact on the whole‐plant sulfur, carbonand nitrogen economy are dampened in fix‐ plants, which in most respects metabolically re‐sembled uninoculated plants, indicating a strong interaction between nitrogen fixation andsulfur and carbon metabolism.


2015 ◽  
Vol 112 (49) ◽  
pp. 15232-15237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beatrix Horváth ◽  
Ágota Domonkos ◽  
Attila Kereszt ◽  
Attila Szűcs ◽  
Edit Ábrahám ◽  
...  

Host compatible rhizobia induce the formation of legume root nodules, symbiotic organs within which intracellular bacteria are present in plant-derived membrane compartments termed symbiosomes. In Medicago truncatula nodules, the Sinorhizobium microsymbionts undergo an irreversible differentiation process leading to the development of elongated polyploid noncultivable nitrogen fixing bacteroids that convert atmospheric dinitrogen into ammonia. This terminal differentiation is directed by the host plant and involves hundreds of nodule specific cysteine-rich peptides (NCRs). Except for certain in vitro activities of cationic peptides, the functional roles of individual NCR peptides in planta are not known. In this study, we demonstrate that the inability of M. truncatula dnf7 mutants to fix nitrogen is due to inactivation of a single NCR peptide, NCR169. In the absence of NCR169, bacterial differentiation was impaired and was associated with early senescence of the symbiotic cells. Introduction of the NCR169 gene into the dnf7-2/NCR169 deletion mutant restored symbiotic nitrogen fixation. Replacement of any of the cysteine residues in the NCR169 peptide with serine rendered it incapable of complementation, demonstrating an absolute requirement for all cysteines in planta. NCR169 was induced in the cell layers in which bacteroid elongation was most pronounced, and high expression persisted throughout the nitrogen-fixing nodule zone. Our results provide evidence for an essential role of NCR169 in the differentiation and persistence of nitrogen fixing bacteroids in M. truncatula.


1977 ◽  
Vol 23 (9) ◽  
pp. 1118-1122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert G. Upchurch ◽  
Gerald H. Elkan

Four strains of Rhizobium japonicum, two of which produce slimy and non-slimy colony types and two others which produce large and small colony types, were isolated and cloned. All were infective and nodulated Lee soybean host plants. Each colony type was characterized as to its salt sensitivity to Na+ and K+ ions, relative level of symbiotic nitrogen fixation, and relative level of free-living nitrogen fixation. Growth studies performed in the presence of salts demonstrated that the non-slimy or small colony types were sensitive to salt with significantly depressed growth rates and cell yields. Growth rates and cell yields of slimy, large, colony types were relatively unaffected by salt. Both symbiotic and free-living (non-associative) nitrogen fixation analyses (by acetylene reduction) revealed that the non-slimy, small colonies were significantly more effective than slimy, large colonies.


1965 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
P-C. Chang ◽  
R. Knowles

The occurrence of free-living nitrogen fixers, the potential for nitrogen fixation, and the correlation between the nitrogen-fixing capacities of the soils and bacterial counts were studied using representative Quebec soils.Clostridium occurred more frequently than did Azotobacter. Studies with N15showed that nitrogen fixation was more frequent under anaerobic than under aerobic conditions in all the soil types studied in their unamended state. The addition of glucose stimulated nitrogen fixation. During anaerobic incubation, nitrogen fixation was found to be correlated significantly with the increase in numbers of both total aerobes and Clostridia. The results suggested that facultatively anaerobic nitrogen fixers, and aerobic nitrogen fixers other than Azotobacter, were present.


Author(s):  
G. C. Machray ◽  
W. D. P. Stewart

SynopsisA wide variety of plant-microbe nitrogen-fixing symbioses which include cyanobacteria as the nitrogenfixing partner exist. While some information has been gathered on the biochemical changes in the cyanobacterium upon entering into symbiosis, very little is known about the accompanying changes at the genetic level. Much of our present knowledge of the organisation and control of expression of nitrogenfixation (nif) genes is derived from studies of the free-living diazotroph Klebsiella pneumoniae. This organism thus provides a model system and source of experimental material for the genetic analysis of symbiotic nitrogen fixation. We describe the use of cloned K. pneumoniae genes for nitrogen fixation and its regulation in the genetic analysis' of nitrogen fixation in cyanobacteria which can enter into symbiosis with plants. These studies reveal some dissimilarities in the organisation of nif genes and raise questions as to the genetic control of nitrogen fixation in symbiosis.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Anne-Marie Smit

<p>The novel sphingomonad Novosphingobium nitrogenifigens Y88T (Y88T) is an obligate aerobe able to grow in nutrient-imbalanced environments where nitrogen is naturally limiting, but carbon is found in abundance. Due to its ability to fix atmospheric nitrogen and produce the bioplastic polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA), Y88T is well-suited for growth in a nitrogenlimited but carbon-enriched environment. Because of these metabolic abilities, Y88T is of interest as a model organism for PHA production unconstrained by nitrogen-limiting conditions. Growth profiles and PHA production profiles were determined for Y88T under conditions of carbon enrichment, nitrogen sufficiency and depletion to investigate carbon and nitrogen utilisation as well as PHA production in this organism. Also, since the nitrogenase enzyme required for nitrogen fixation is oxygen labile, the effect of DO concentration and the relationship between aerobic metabolism and the nitrogen-fixing and PHA-producing abilities of Y88T was investigated. This study demonstrated: that glucose is the preferred growth substrate for Y88T; that no direct relationship exists between nitrogen fixation and PHB accumulation in Y88T; that Y88T can reliably produce in excess of 80 % of its dry weight as polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB), a type of PHA, from glucose under nitrogenlimiting conditions. Proteomic signatures were determined for the various physiological responses of Y88T to growth, nitrogen utilisation, PHB production and exposure to different levels of DO. More than 250 unique proteins, including the core nitrogen-fixation, PHB-synthetic and glycolytic proteins were identified. Y88T apparently converts glucose to PHB via three interrelated glucose catabolic pathways and proteins likely involved in these pathways were identified. This study revealed that, regardless of growth conditions and despite decreased abundance of the Y88T nitrogenase enzyme, growth and PHB synthesis were not inhibited at DOhigh concentrations. Proteomic characterisation of the Y88T phasin, a PHA granule-associated protein, iii identified an amino-terminal, low complexity alanine and proline rich segment found only in other sphingomonads. The expression level of the Y88T phasin correlated well with PHB yields, suggesting the use of this protein as a biomarker to optimise PHB yield in a production environment. Y88T has the potential to be a useful production strain in pure culture, utilising its natural and robust propensity to metabolise glucose to preferentially produce PHB. Targets for biotechnological improvement and the potential for application of Y88T to biofuel production are discussed.</p>


mSystems ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina A. Contador ◽  
Siu-Kit Lo ◽  
Siu H. J. Chan ◽  
Hon-Ming Lam

ABSTRACT Rhizobia are soil bacteria able to establish symbiosis with diverse host plants. Specifically, Sinorhizobium fredii is a soil bacterium that forms nitrogen-fixing root nodules in diverse legumes, including soybean. The strain S. fredii CCBAU45436 is a dominant sublineage of S. fredii that nodulates soybeans in alkaline-saline soils in the Huang-Huai-Hai Plain region of China. Here, we present a manually curated metabolic model of the symbiotic form of Sinorhizobium fredii CCBAU45436. A symbiosis reaction was defined to describe the specific soybean-microsymbiont association. The performance and quality of the reconstruction had a 70% score when assessed using a standardized genome-scale metabolic model test suite. The model was used to evaluate in silico single-gene knockouts to determine the genes controlling the nitrogen fixation process. One hundred forty-one of 541 genes (26%) were found to influence the symbiotic process, wherein 121 genes were predicted as essential and 20 others as having a partial effect. Transcriptomic profiles of CCBAU45436 were used to evaluate the nitrogen fixation capacity in cultivated versus in wild soybean inoculated with the microsymbiont. The model quantified the nitrogen fixation activities of the strain in these two hosts and predicted a higher nitrogen fixation capacity in cultivated soybean. Our results are consistent with published data demonstrating larger amounts of ureides and total nitrogen in cultivated soybean than in wild soybean. This work presents the first metabolic network reconstruction of S. fredii as an example of a useful tool for exploring the potential benefits of microsymbionts to sustainable agriculture and the ecosystem. IMPORTANCE Nitrogen is the most limiting macronutrient for plant growth, and rhizobia are important bacteria for agriculture because they can fix atmospheric nitrogen and make it available to legumes through the establishment of a symbiotic relationship with their host plants. In this work, we studied the nitrogen fixation process in the microsymbiont Sinorhizobium fredii at the genome level. A metabolic model was built using genome annotation and literature to reconstruct the symbiotic form of S. fredii. Genes controlling the nitrogen fixation process were identified by simulating gene knockouts. Additionally, the nitrogen-fixing capacities of S. fredii CCBAU45436 in symbiosis with cultivated and wild soybeans were evaluated. The predictions suggested an outperformance of S. fredii with cultivated soybean, consistent with published experimental evidence. The reconstruction presented here will help to understand and improve nitrogen fixation capabilities of S. fredii and will be beneficial for agriculture by reducing the reliance on fertilizer applications.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Haoran Chen ◽  
John Markham

AbstractSmall inreases in CO2 stimulate nitrogen fixation and plant growth. Increasing soil N can inhibit nitrogen fixation. However, no studies to date have tested how nitrogen fixing plants perform under ancient CO2 levels (100 MYA), when nitrogen fixing plants evolved, with different levels of N additions. The aim of this study was to assess if ancient CO2, compared to present, favors nitrogen fixers over a range of soil nitrogen concentrations. Nitrogen fixers (Alnus incana ssp. rugosa, Alnus viridis ssp. crispa, and Alnus rubra) and their close non-nitrogen fixing relatives (Betula pumila, Betula papyrifera, Betula glandulosa) were grown at ancient (1600 ppm) or present (400 ppm) CO2 over a range of soil N levels, equivalent to 0, 10, 50, and 200 kg N ha−1 year−1. The growth of non-N fixing plants increased more than N fixing plants in response to the increasing N levels. When grown at an ancient CO2 level, the N level at which non-nitrogen fixing plant biomass exceeded nitrogen fixing plant biomass was twice as high (61 kg N ha−1 year−1) as the N level when plants were grown at the ambient CO2 level. Specific nodule activity was also reduced with an increasing level of soil N. Our results show there was a greater advantage in being a nitrogen fixer under ancient levels of CO2 compared with the present CO2 level.


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