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Quantitation of adsorption of rhizobia in low numbers to small legume roots.

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TLDR
Overall adsorption of various symbiotic and nonsymbiotic bacterial strains to alfalfa and clover roots did not reflect the specificities of these legumes for their respective microsymbionts, R. meliloti and R. trifolii.
Abstract
Bacteria adsorbed in low numbers to alfalfa or clover root surfaces were counted after incubation of seedlings in mineral solution with very dilute inocula (less than 105 bacteria per ml) of an antibiotic-resistant strain under defined conditions. After specified washing, bacteria which remained adsorbed to roots were selectively quantitated by culturing the roots embedded in yeast extract-mannitol-antibiotic agar and counting the microcolonies along the root surface; the range was from about 1 bacterium per root (estimated as the most probable number) to 50 bacteria per cm of root length (by direct counting). This simple procedure can be used with any pair of small-rooted plant and antibiotic-resistant bacterium, requires bacterial concentrations comparable to those frequently found in soils, and yields macroscopic localization and distribution data for adsorbed bacteria over the root surface. The number of adsorbed bacteria was proportional to the size of the inoculum. One of every four Rhizobium meliloti cells adsorbed in very low numbers to alfalfa roots resulted in the formation of a nodule. Overall adsorption of various symbiotic and nonsymbiotic bacterial strains to alfalfa and clover roots did not reflect the specificities of these legumes for their respective microsymbionts, R. meliloti and R. trifolii.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Role of Motility and Chemotaxis in Efficiency of Nodulation by Rhizobium meliloti.

TL;DR: It appears that motility and chemotaxis are quantitatively important traits that facilitate the initial contact and adsorption of symbiotic rhizobia to the host root surface, increase the efficiency of nodule initiation, and increase the rate of infection development.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Genetic and Biochemical Basis for Nodulation of Legumes by Rhizobia

TL;DR: This review focuses on the nodulation genes of rhizobia, with particular emphasis on the concept of biological specificity of symbiosis with legume host plants.
Journal ArticleDOI

A positive correlation between bacterial autoaggregation and biofilm formation in native Sinorhizobium meliloti isolates from Argentina.

TL;DR: A positive correlation was found between autoaggregation and biofilm formation abilities in these rhizobia, indicating that both processes depend on the same physical adhesive forces.
Journal ArticleDOI

Symbiotic pseudorevertants of Rhizobium meliloti ndv mutants.

TL;DR: Data are taken to indicate that wild-type R. meliloti normally has considerable excess capability for both attachment and infection thread initiation and that the symbiotic block in ndv mutants lies further along the developmental pathway than either of these processes, probably at the level of infection thread extension.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Manual for the Practical Study of Root-Nodule Bacteria.

TL;DR: A manual for the practical study of root-nodule bacteria, and a guide to the collection of and usage of such manuals.
Book

A manual for the practical study of root-nodule bacteria

J. M. Vincent
TL;DR: A manual for the practical study of root-nodule bacteria is presented in this article, where the authors present a set of root nodule genes and root nodes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Infection of Clover Root Hairs by Nodule Bacteria Studied by a Simple Glass Slide Technique

Gösta Fåhraeus
- 01 Apr 1957 - 
TL;DR: A simple glass slide technique has been devised for the continuous microscopical observation of growth and infection of root hairs of clover seedlings which involves an aseptic cultivation of seedlings on microscope slides which are partly immersed in a mineral salts medium.
Journal ArticleDOI

Early Events in the Infection of Soybean (Glycine max L. Merr) by Rhizobium japonicum: I. LOCALIZATION OF INFECTIBLE ROOT CELLS.

TL;DR: The results indicate that the infectibility of given host cells is a transient property that appears and then is lost within a few hours, and that host responses leading to infection and nodulation are triggered or initiated in less than 2 hours after inoculation.
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