Plant Physiol. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
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Plant Physiology 94:1276-1281 (1990)
© 1990 American Society of Plant Biologists

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Microbe-Plant Interactions

Nodulation of Soybean by a Transposon-Mutant of Rhizobium fredii USDA257 Is Subject to Competitive Nodulation Blocking by Other Rhizobia 1

Pedro A. Balatti and Steven G. Pueppke

Department of Plant Pathology, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211

Rhizobium fredii USDA257 fails to nodulate the improved soybean [Glycine max (L.)Merr.] cultivar McCall in plastic growth pouches. Mutant 257DH4, which was derived from USDA257 by transposon mutagenesis, forms nitrogen fixing nodules under these conditions. If USDA257 is present in inocula containing the mutant, most infections are arrested prior to organization of the nodule meristem, and nodule number is reduced by 95%. The improved cultivars Essex, Harosoy, Hodgson 78, and Viçoja, as well as a supernodulating mutant of Williams, respond like McCall to inoculation with such mixtures of bacteria. Nodulation blocking on McCall can be elicited by rhizobia other than USDA257, provided that they meet two criteria: Blocking strains must themselves be able to induce cortical cells of McCall to divide, and such divisions must proceed to the stage of nodule meristem formation. Nodulation by the mutant remains sensitive to a challenge inoculation with USDA257 for only the first 6 to 12 hours after inoculation. Nodulation blocking involving mutant 257DH4 thus appears to be a rapid, generalized process.


1 Underwritten by grant No. 88-37234-4101 from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Pedro Balatti was supported by the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas de la Republica Argentina. This is Journal Series No. 11293 of the Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station.







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