Exemplar Abstract for Frankia alni (Woronin 1866) Von Tubeuf 1895 (Approved Lists 1980) emend. Nouioui et al. 2016.

2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Thomas Parker ◽  
Sarah Wigley ◽  
George M Garrity
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melanie Gasser ◽  
Nicole Alloisio ◽  
Pascale Fournier ◽  
Severine Balmand ◽  
Ons Kharrat ◽  
...  

The response of Alnus glutinosa to Frankia alni is complex with several sequential physiological modifications that include calcium spiking, root hair deformation, penetration, induction of primordium, formation and growth of nodule. A transcriptomic study of seedlings in hydroponics after early contact (2.5 days) with Frankia alni, either with a culture supernatant or with living cells separated from the roots by a dialysis membrane, permitted to identify plant genes which expression level was modified upon early contact with Frankia. Forty-two genes were significantly up-regulated in both experiments, most of them encoding biological processes such as oxidative stress or response to stimuli. Among them, the most upregulated gene was a non-specific lipid transfer protein encoding gene with a fold change of 141. This nsLTP was found to increase Frankia nitrogen fixation at sub-lethal concentration. Interestingly, it was immunolocalized to a region of the deformed root hair at an early infection stage and later in nodules, it was localized around bacterial vesicles suggesting a role in early and late stages of symbiosis.


2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (13) ◽  
pp. 6125-6135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Medhat Rehan ◽  
Martin Kluge ◽  
Stefan Fränzle ◽  
Harald Kellner ◽  
René Ullrich ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Thomas Parker ◽  
Dorothea Taylor ◽  
George M Garrity ◽  
Kara Mannor
Keyword(s):  

2010 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 593-607 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole Alloisio ◽  
Clothilde Queiroux ◽  
Pascale Fournier ◽  
Petar Pujic ◽  
Philippe Normand ◽  
...  

The actinobacteria Frankia spp. are able to induce the formation of nodules on the roots of a large spectrum of actinorhizal plants, where they convert dinitrogen to ammonia in exchange for plant photosynthates. In the present study, transcriptional analyses were performed on nitrogen-replete free-living Frankia alni cells and on Alnus glutinosa nodule bacteria, using whole-genome microarrays. Distribution of nodule-induced genes on the genome was found to be mostly over regions with high synteny between three Frankia spp. genomes, while nodule-repressed genes, which were mostly hypothetical and not conserved, were spread around the genome. Genes known to be related to nitrogen fixation were highly induced, nif (nitrogenase), hup2 (hydrogenase uptake), suf (sulfur-iron cluster), and shc (hopanoids synthesis). The expression of genes involved in ammonium assimilation and transport was strongly modified, suggesting that bacteria ammonium assimilation was limited. Genes involved in particular in transcriptional regulation, signaling processes, protein drug export, protein secretion, lipopolysaccharide, and peptidoglycan biosynthesis that may play a role in symbiosis were also identified. We also showed that this Frankia symbiotic transcriptome was highly similar among phylogenetically distant plant families Betulaceae and Myricaceae. Finally, comparison with rhizobia transcriptome suggested that F. alni is metabolically more active in symbiosis than rhizobia.


2018 ◽  
Vol 169 (2) ◽  
pp. 90-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tristan Lurthy ◽  
Nicole Alloisio ◽  
Pascale Fournier ◽  
Stéphanie Anchisi ◽  
Alise Ponsero ◽  
...  

2001 ◽  
Vol 67 (5) ◽  
pp. 2116-2122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valerie Huguet ◽  
Janet Mccray Batzli ◽  
Jeff F. Zimpfer ◽  
Philippe Normand ◽  
Jeffrey O. Dawson ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The identity of Frankia strains from nodules ofMyrica gale, Alnus incana subsp. rugosa, andShepherdia canadensis was determined for a natural stand on a lake shore sand dune in Wisconsin, where the three actinorhizal plant species were growing in close proximity, and from two additional stands with M. gale as the sole actinorhizal component. Unisolated strains were compared by their 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) restriction patterns using a direct PCR amplification protocol on nodules. Phylogenetic relationships among nodular Frankia strains were analyzed by comparing complete 16S rDNA sequences of study and reference strains. Where the three actinorhizal species occurred together, each host species was nodulated by a different phylogenetic group of Frankia strains. M. gale strains from all three sites belonged to an Alnus-Casuarina group, closely related to Frankia alni representative strains, and were low in diversity for a host genus considered promiscuous with respect to Frankia microsymbiont genotype.Frankia strains from A. incana nodules were also within the Alnus-Casuarina cluster, distinct fromFrankia strains of M. gale nodules at the mixed actinorhizal site but not from Frankia strains from twoM. gale nodules at a second site in Wisconsin.Frankia strains from nodules of S. canadensisbelonged to a divergent subset of a cluster ofElaeagnaceae-infective strains and exhibited a high degree of diversity. The three closely related local Frankiapopulations in Myrica nodules could be distinguished from one another using our approach. In addition to geographic separation and host selectivity for Frankia microsymbionts, edaphic factors such as soil moisture and organic matter content, which varied among locales, may account for differences in Frankiapopulations found in Myrica nodules.


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