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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Clovers secrete specific phenolic compounds which either stimulate or repress nod gene expression in Rhizobium trifolii

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TLDR
It is proposed that these phenolic compounds secreted from the roots of white clover plants act at the bacterial membrane or that an active uptake system is involved.
Abstract
Rhizobium trifolii mutants containing Escherichia coli lac gene fusions to specific nodulation (nod) genes were used to characterise phenolic compounds secreted from the roots of white clover (Trifolium repens) plants. These compounds either had stimulatory or inhibitory effects upon the induction of the nod genes. The stimulatory compounds were hydroxylated flavones and the most active compound was 7,4'-dihydroxyflavone. The inhibitory compounds present in white clover root exudates were umbelliferone (a coumarin) and formononetin (an isoflavone). Transcriptional activation of nod gene promoters in response to short exposures (3 h) of 7,4'-dihydroxyflavone was growth phase dependent; cells in early log phase were highly responsive to flavone additions in vitro and nod gene induction could be detected within 20 min of exposure at 5 x 10 M. Cells in other growth phases were generally unresponsive. A 10-fold molar excess of umbelliferone to 7,4'-dihydroxyflavone resulted in complete inhibition of nod gene induction. Some commercially-obtained flavones were found to have weak stimulatory activity but could also inhibit nod gene induction by more effective stimulatory compounds. Strong stimulatory and inhibitory compounds all possessed a 7-hydroxy moiety and showed other structural similarities. This suggested that there was one binding site for these compounds. Because the response to these compounds was rapid, we propose that these phenolics act at the bacterial membrane or that an active uptake system is involved.

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Root exudates as mediators of mineral acquisition in low-nutrient environments

TL;DR: The current understanding of how plants use root exudates to modify rhizosphere pH and the potential benefits associated with such processes are assessed are assessed in this review.
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Molecular Basis of Symbiotic Promiscuity

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Rhizobium-legume nodulation: life together in the underground.

TL;DR: This review concerns a dramatic association, one of the few that has been studied in detail: the nitrogen fixing symbiosis between certain plants and microbes Rhizobium bacteria stimulate leguminous plants to develop root nodules, which the bacteria infect and inhabit.
References
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Book

Experiments in molecular genetics

TL;DR: Molecular Genetics (Biology): An Overview | Sciencing Experimental in Molecular Genetics Experiments in molecular genetics (1972 edition) | Open ...
Journal ArticleDOI

Protein-DNA Recognition

TL;DR: The current models for the complexes of Cro, repressor, and CAP with operator DNA are probably fundamentally correct, but it should be emphasized that model building alone, even when coupled with genetic and biochemical studies, cannot be expected to provide a completely reliable "high-resolution" view of the protein-DNA complex.
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A plant flavone, luteolin, induces expression of Rhizobium meliloti nodulation genes

TL;DR: The induction of nodABC expression by alfalfa exudates demonstrates host-symbiont signaling at an early stage in nodule development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plasmid insertion mutagenesis and lac gene fusion with mini-mu bacteriophage transposons.

TL;DR: In this article, small bacteriophage Mu transposable elements containing the lac operon structural genes were constructed to facilitate the isolation and use of Mu insertions and lac gene fusions.
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Alterations in outer membrane permeability

TL;DR: Outer Membrane Permeability in So.me Bacteria, Antibiotic-Supersensitive Mutants, and Other M�!tational Alterations are introduced.
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