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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Actinorhizal symbioses and their N2 fixation

Kerstin Huss-Danell
- 01 Jul 1997 - 
- Vol. 136, Iss: 3, pp 375-405
TLDR
More than 200 angiosperms, distributed in 25 genera, develop root nodule symbioses (actinorhizas) with soil bacteria of the actinomycetous genus Frankia as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
summary More than 200 angiosperms, distributed in 25 genera, develop root nodule symbioses (actinorhizas) with soil bacteria of the actinomycetous genus Frankia. Although most soils studied contain infective Frankia, cultured strains are available only after isolation from root nodules. Frankia infects roots via root hairs in some hosts or via intercellular penetration in others. The nodule originates in the pericycle. The number of nodules in Alnus is determined by the plant in an autoregulated process that, in turn, is modulated by nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphate. Except in the genera Allocausarina and Casuarina, Frankia in nodules develops so-called vesicles where nitrogenase is localized. Sporulation of Frankia occurs in some symbioses. As a group, actinorhizal plants show a large range of anatomical and biochemical adaptations in order to balance the oxygen tension near nitrogenase. In symbioses with well aerated nodule tissue like Alnus, the vesicles have a multilayered envelope composed mainly of lipids, bacterio-hopanetetrol and their derivatives. This envelope is assumed to retard the diffusion of oxygen into the nitrogenase-containing vesicle. In symbioses like Casuarina, the infected plant cells themselves, rather than Frankia, appear to retard oxygen diffusion, and high concentrations of haemoglobin indicate an infected region with a low oxygen tension. At least in Alnus spp., ammonia resulting from N2 fixation is assimilated by glutamine synthetase in the plant. The carbon compound(s) used by Frankia in nodules is not yet known. Nitrogenase activity decreases in response to a number of environmental factors but recovers upon return to normal conditions. This dynamism in nitrogenase activity is often explained by loss and recovery of active nitrogenase and has been traced to loss and recovery of the nitrogenase proteins themselves. Recovery is partly due to growth of Frankia and to development of new vesicles in the Alnus nodules. In the field, varying conditions continuously affect the plants and the measured rate of N2 fixation is a result not only of the conditions prevailing at the moment but also of the conditions experienced over preceding days. N2 fixed by actinorhizal plants is substantial and actinorhizal plants have great potential in soil reclamation and in various types of forestry. Several species are also useful in horticulture.

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Citations
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Plant growth promoting rhizobacteria as biofertilizers

TL;DR: This review focuses on the known, the putative, and the speculative modes-of-action of PGPR, which include fixing N2, increasing the availability of nutrients in the rhizosphere, positively influencing root growth and morphology, and promoting other beneficial plant–microbe symbioses.
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Nitrogen-fixing bacteria associated with leguminous and non-leguminous plants

TL;DR: A wide diversity of nitrogen-fixing bacterial species belonging to most phyla of the Bacteria domain have the capacity to colonize the rhizosphere and to interact with plants.
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Widespread and persistent populations of a major new marine actinomycete taxon in ocean sediments.

TL;DR: This study presents the first evidence for the existence of widespread populations of obligate marine actinomycetes from ocean sediments, and suggests novelty at the genus level.
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Biological nitrogen fixation in non-legume plants

TL;DR: Improved understanding of the molecular mechanism of BNF outside the legume-rhizobium symbiosis could have important agronomic implications and enable the use of N-fertilizers to be reduced or even avoided.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Actinorhizal Symbiosis.

TL;DR: A model for actinorhizal specificity is proposed that includes different levels or degrees of specificity of host-symbiont interactions, from fully compatible to incompatible.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: Highlights in biological nitrogen fixation during the last fifty years are highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crystal structure of the nickel–iron hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio gigas

TL;DR: The X-ray structure of the heterodimeric Ni–Fe hydrogenase from Desulfovibrio gigas, the enzyme responsible for the metabolism of molecular hydrogen, has been solved at 2.85 Å resolution and suggests plausible electron and proton transfer pathways.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Developmental biology of legume nodulation

TL;DR: Many legumes respond to Rhizobium inoculation by developing unique structures known as nodules on their roots, and there is some controversy as to whether the legume nodule is an organ sui generis or a highly derived lateral root.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biology of Frankia strains, actinomycete symbionts of actinorhizal plants.

TL;DR: Sufficient information about the relationship of Frankia strains to other bacteria, and to each other, is now available to warrant the creation of some species based on phenotypic and genetic criteria.
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