Transient Responses of Nitrogenase to Acetylene and Oxygen in Actinorhizal Nodules and Cultured Frankia
Author(s) -
Warwick B. Silvester,
Lawrence J. Winship
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.92.2.480
Subject(s) - frankia , nitrogenase , actinorhizal plant , nodule (geology) , botany , root nodule , biology , casuarina , oxygen , symbiosis , horticulture , nitrogen fixation , chemistry , bacteria , paleontology , genetics , organic chemistry
Nitrogenase activity in root nodules of four species of actinorhizal plants showed varying declines in response to exposure to acetylene (10% v/v). Gymnostoma papuanum (S. Moore) L. Johnson. and Casuarina equisetifolia L. nodules showed a small decline (5-15%) with little or no recovery over 15 minutes. Myrica gale L. nodules showed a sharp decline followed by a rapid return to peak activity. Alnus incana ssp. rugosa (Du Roi) Clausen. nodules usually showed varying degrees of decline followed by a slower return to peak or near-peak activity. We call these effects acetylene-induced transients. Rapid increases in oxygen tension also caused dramatic transient decreases in nitrogenase activity in all species. The magnitude of the transient decrease was related to the size of the O(2) partial pressure (pO(2)) rise, to the proximity of the starting and ending oxygen tensions to the pO(2) optimum, and to the time for which the plant was exposed to the lower pO(2). Oxygen-induced transients, induced both by step jumps in pO(2) and by O(2) pulses, were also observed in cultures of Frankia. The effects seen in nodules are purely a response by the bacterium and not a nodule effect per se. Oxygen-induced nitrogenase transients in actinorhizal nodules from the plant genera tested here do not appear to be a result of changes in nodule diffusion resistance.
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