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OtherPLANT-MICROBE AND PLANT-INSECT INTERACTIONS
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P Metabolism in the Bean-Rhizobium tropici Symbiosis

T. S. Al-Niemi, M. L. Kahn, T. R. McDermott
T. S. Al-Niemi
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M. L. Kahn
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T. R. McDermott
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Published April 1997. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.113.4.1233

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Abstract

Nodulated legumes require more P than legumes growing on mineral nitrogen, but little is known about the basis for the higher P requirement. Experiments were conducted to determine how Rhizobium tropici responds to P limitation and to understand how P is partitioned between the symbionts under conditions of adequate or limiting P. Free-living R. tropici responds to P stress by increasing P transport capacity and inducing both an acid and an alkaline phosphatase. This P-stress response occurs when the medium P concentration decreases below 1 [mu]M. Both P-stress-inducible phosphatases are found in bacteroids taken from plants growing with adequate P, suggesting that P levels in the symbiosome space is low enough to induce the expression of these enzymes. Bacteroid alkaline phosphatase-specific activity was highest during vegetative growth of the bean plant, but decreased approximately 75% during the host reproductive stages. In hydroponic experiments 32P-tracer studies showed that in vivo rates of P accumulation were significantly higher in bacteroids from P-limited plants compared with those from plants that had been supplied with adequate P. In contrast, label accumulation in leaves was greatest in plants grown with adequate P.

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P Metabolism in the Bean-Rhizobium tropici Symbiosis
T. S. Al-Niemi, M. L. Kahn, T. R. McDermott
Plant Physiology Apr 1997, 113 (4) 1233-1242; DOI: 10.1104/pp.113.4.1233

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P Metabolism in the Bean-Rhizobium tropici Symbiosis
T. S. Al-Niemi, M. L. Kahn, T. R. McDermott
Plant Physiology Apr 1997, 113 (4) 1233-1242; DOI: 10.1104/pp.113.4.1233
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Plant Physiology
Vol. 113, Issue 4
Apr 1997
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  • Purification, Characterization, and Molecular Cloning of the Gene of a Seed-Specific Antimicrobial Protein from Pokeweed
  • Salicylic Acid Mediated by the Oxidative Burst Is a Key Molecule in Local and Systemic Responses of Cotton Challenged by an Avirulent Race of Xanthomonas campestris pvmalvacearum
  • Expression and Localization of Nitrilase during Symptom Development of the Clubroot Disease in Arabidopsis
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