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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Archives of microbiology 100 (1974), S. 219-238 
    ISSN: 1432-072X
    Keywords: Rhizobium ; Nodulation ; Symbiosis ; Adenine ; Thiamine ; Auxotroph ; Prototroph
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract A non-nodulating auxotroph (L4-73) derived from an effective strain (L4) of Rhizobium leguminosarum has a growth requirement for adenine and thiamine. The auxotroph was able to infect the roots of the host plant Pisum sativum L. but formed root nodules (ineffective in nitrogen fixation) only when adenine and, to a lesser extent, thiamine were added to the plant substrate. Nodules formed in the presence of adenine were structurally abnormal, containing small cells in which infection threads appeared to have aborted. In the presence of thiamine the auxotroph produced a smaller number of nodules which were slightly more developed and were able to reduce trace amounts of acetylene to ethylene. The adenine effect predominated when both growth factors were added together or separately in different sequences. Adenine amendment was required during the first 6 days following inoculation to achieve the maximum number of nodules. The block in symbiosis could not be fully overcome by sequential addition or removal from the root medium of either compound or by addition of some other adeninecontaining compounds. Partial prototroph revertants requiring adenine but not thiamine induced a nodulation response similar to that of the original auxotroph in the presence of thiamine; partial prototrophs requiring thiamine only were almost fully effective. Bioassay of pea root tissue indicated the presence of significant amounts of both adenine and thiamine or related substances in the roots. The auxotroph was able to compete with the parent strain L4 in nodulation on roots of pea only in the presence of exogenous adenine.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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