Symbiotic nitrogen fixation is carried out in specialized organs, the nodules, whose formation is induced on leguminous host plants by, bacteria belonging to the family Rhizobiaceae. Nodule development is a complex multistep process, which requires continued interaction between the two partners and thus the exchange of different signals and metabolites. NH4+ is not only, the primary product but also the main regulator of the symbiosis: either as ammonium and after conversion into organic compounds, it regulates most stages of the interaction, from the production of nodule inducers to the growth, function, and maintenance of nodules. This review examines the adaptation of bacterial NH4+ metabolism to the variable environment generated by the plant, which actively controls and restricts bacterial growth by affecting oxygen and nutrient availability thereby, allowing a proficient interaction and at the same time preventing parasitic invasion. Me describe the regulatory circuitry responsible for the downregulation of bacterial genes involved in NH4+ assimilation occurring early, during nodule invasion. This is a key and necessary step for the differentiation of N-2-fixing bacteroids (the endocellular symbiotic form of rhizobia) and for the development of efficient nodules.
Key role of bacterial NH4+ metabolism in rhizobium-plant symbiosis
Patriarca EJ;
2002
Abstract
Symbiotic nitrogen fixation is carried out in specialized organs, the nodules, whose formation is induced on leguminous host plants by, bacteria belonging to the family Rhizobiaceae. Nodule development is a complex multistep process, which requires continued interaction between the two partners and thus the exchange of different signals and metabolites. NH4+ is not only, the primary product but also the main regulator of the symbiosis: either as ammonium and after conversion into organic compounds, it regulates most stages of the interaction, from the production of nodule inducers to the growth, function, and maintenance of nodules. This review examines the adaptation of bacterial NH4+ metabolism to the variable environment generated by the plant, which actively controls and restricts bacterial growth by affecting oxygen and nutrient availability thereby, allowing a proficient interaction and at the same time preventing parasitic invasion. Me describe the regulatory circuitry responsible for the downregulation of bacterial genes involved in NH4+ assimilation occurring early, during nodule invasion. This is a key and necessary step for the differentiation of N-2-fixing bacteroids (the endocellular symbiotic form of rhizobia) and for the development of efficient nodules.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.