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Plant Physiology 61:398-401 (1978) © 1978 American Society of Plant Biologists Hydrogen Reactions of Nodulated Leguminous PlantsII. Effects on Dry Matter Accumulation and Nitrogen Fixation 1Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331
The interaction between the ATP-dependent evolution of H2 catalyzed by nitrogenase and the oxidation of H2 via a hydrogenase has been postulated to influence the efficiency of the N2-fixing process in nodulated legumes. A comparative study using soybean (Glycine max L. Merr.) cv. Anoka inoculated with either Rhizobium japonicum strain USDA 31 or USDA 110 and cowpea (Vigna unguiculata L. Walp.) cv. Whippoorwill inoculated with Rhizobium strain 176A27 or 176A28 cultured on a N-free medium was conducted to address this question. Nodules from the Anoka cultivar inoculated with USDA 31 evolved H2 in air and the H2 produced accounted for about 30% of the energy transferred to the nitrogenase system during the period of active N2 fixation. In contrast the same soybean cultivar inoculated with USDA 110 produced nodules with an active hydrogenase and consequently did not evolve H2 in air. A comparison of Anoka soybeans inoculated with the two different strains of R. japonicum showed that mean rates of C2H2 reduction and O2 consumption and mean mass of nodules taken at four times during vegetative growth were not significantly different. When compared to Anoka inoculated with USDA 31, the same cultivar inoculated with USDA 110 showed increases in total dry matter, per cent nitrogen, and total N2 fixed of 24, 7, and 31%, respectively. Cowpeas in symbiosis with the hydrogenase-producing strain 176A28 in comparison with the same cultivar inoculated with the H2-evolving strain 176A27 produced increases in plant dry weight and total N2 fixed of 11 and 15%, respectively. This apparent increase in the efficiency of N2 fixation for nodulated legumes capable of reutilizing the H2 evolved from nitrogenase is considered and it is concluded that provision of conclusive evidence of the role of the H2-recycling process in N2-fixing efficiency of legumes will require comparison of Rhizobium strains that are genetically identical with the exception of the presence of hydrogenase.
2 Present address: Department of Biochemistry, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824. 1 This research was funded by grants to H. J. E. from the National Science Foundation (PCM 74-17812-A02), The Rockefeller Foundation (GA AS-7628), and by the Oregon Agricultural Experimental Station (Technical Paper No. 4570). This article has been cited by other articles:
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