Plant Physiol. Drug Metab Dispos
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Plant Physiology 75:90-94 (1984)
© 1984 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Articles

Rhizobium Infection and Nodule Development in Soybean Are Affected by Exposure of the Cotyledons to Light 1

Nasir S. A. Malik, Mark K. Pence, Harry E. Calvert and Wolfgang D. Bauer

C. F. Kettering Research Laboratory, Yellow Springs, Ohio 45387

The initiation of Rhizobium infections and the development of nodules on the primary root of soybean Glycine max L. Merr cv Williams seedlings are strongly affected by exposure of the cotyledons/hypocotyls to light. Seedlings in plastic growth pouches were inoculated with R. japonicum in dim light and the position of the root tip of each seedling was marked on the face of the pouch. The pouches were covered and kept in the dark for various times before exposing the upper portions of the plants (cotyledons and hypocotyls) to light. Maximum nodulation occurred if the plants were kept in the dark until 1 day after inoculation. The exposure of plants to light 2 days before inoculation reduced the number of nodules by 50% while the number of nodules was reduced by 70% if the plants were kept in the dark until 7 days after inoculation. Anatomical studies revealed that exposure to light prior to inoculation reduced both the number of infection centers with visible infection threads and the number of infections which developed nodule meristems. Plants kept in the dark for 7 days after inoculation formed a normal number of infection threads above the root tip mark, but very few of these infections developed a nodule meristem. It appears that light stimulates soybean to produce substances which can both inhibit the formation of infection threads and enhance the development of nodules from established infection threads. The effects of light on nodulation appear to be expressed independently of the Rhizobium-induced suppression of nodule formation in younger regions of the root.


1 Supported in part by grant 82-CRGO-1-1041 from the Competitive Research Grants Office of the United States Department of Agriculture. This paper is contribution 814 of the C.F. Kettering Research Laboratory.







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Copyright © 1984 by the American Society of Plant Biologists