학술논문

Boron deficiency affects rhizobia cell surface polysaccharides important for suppression of plant defense mechanisms during legume recognition and for development of nitrogen-fixing symbiosis.
Document Type
Article
Source
Plant & Soil. Dec2012, Vol. 361 Issue 1/2, p385-395. 11p. 2 Black and White Photographs, 3 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*BORON deficiency
*RHIZOBIACEAE
*CELL membranes
*POLYSACCHARIDES
*PLANT defenses
*LEGUMES
*NITROGEN-fixing microorganisms
*PLANTS
Language
ISSN
0032-079X
Abstract
Background and aims: Boron (B) deficiency negatively affects legume-rhizobia symbiotic interactions and the development of N-fixing nodules. Many described alterations are related to plant-derived carbohydrates involved in plant-microbe interactions; however, the effects of B on the bacterial polysaccharides that are crucial for correct symbiosis are unknown. Methods: Exopolysaccharide (EPS) production in several rhizobial strains grown in B-free media was analyzed following acetone extraction and silver-stained electrophoretic profiles of lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Moreover, the effects of B deficiency and mutations of the pathogenesis-related ABR17 protein on rhizobia cell surface polysaccharides on legume root colonization, nodulation, nitrogen fixation, and induction in pea nodules were investigated. Results: B-deficiency led to a 65-80 % reduction in the amount of EPS and to modifications of LPS in all strains tested. B-deficient rhizobia were not affected in the degree of adsorption to roots. However, nodulation and nitrogen fixation were reduced or inhibited by B starvation or in plants inoculated with EPS or LPS defective mutants, and ABR17 was induced. Conclusion: The results provide evidence that B is important for production of rhizobia cell surface polysaccharides essential to establish a symbiotic rather than a pathogenic-like interaction, and for development of the N-fixing legume root nodule. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]