نتایج جستجو برای: sinorhizobium medicae

تعداد نتایج: 1717  

Journal: :The New phytologist 2008
Jason J Terpolilli Graham W O'Hara Ravi P Tiwari Michael J Dilworth John G Howieson

Medicago truncatula (barrel medic) A17 is currently being sequenced as a model legume, complementing the sequenced root nodule bacterial strain Sinorhizobium meliloti 1021 (Sm1021). In this study, the effectiveness of the Sm1021-M. truncatula symbiosis at fixing N(2) was evaluated. N(2) fixation effectiveness was examined with eight Medicago species and three accessions of M. truncatula with Sm...

Journal: :FEMS microbiology letters 2013
Mariano Pistorio Gonzalo A Torres Tejerizo María Florencia Del Papa María de los Angeles Giusti Mauricio Lozano Antonio Lagares

We approached the identification of Ensifer (Sinorhizobium) meliloti conjugal functions by random Tn5-B13 mutagenesis of the pSmeLPU88a plasmid of E. meliloti strain LPU88 and the subsequent selection of those mutants that had lost the ability to mobilize the small plasmid pSmeLPU88b. The Tn5-B13-insertion site of one of the mutants was cloned as an EcoRI-restricted DNA fragment that after subs...

2010
Wayne Reeve Patrick Chain Graham O’Hara Julie Ardley Kemanthi Nandesena Lambert Bräu Ravi Tiwari Stephanie Malfatti Hajnalka Kiss Alla Lapidus Alex Copeland Matt Nolan Miriam Land Loren Hauser Yun-Juan Chang Natalia Ivanova Konstantinos Mavromatis Victor Markowitz Nikos Kyrpides Margaret Gollagher Ron Yates Michael Dilworth John Howieson

Ensifer (Sinorhizobium) medicae is an effective nitrogen fixing microsymbiont of a diverse range of annual Medicago (medic) species. Strain WSM419 is an aerobic, motile, non-spore forming, Gram-negative rod isolated from a M. murex root nodule collected in Sardinia, Italy in 1981. WSM419 was manufactured commercially in Australia as an inoculant for annual medics during 1985 to 1993 due to its ...

Journal: :Molecular plant-microbe interactions : MPMI 2007
Christian Sohlenkamp Kanaan A Galindo-Lagunas Ziqiang Guan Pablo Vinuesa Sally Robinson Jane Thomas-Oates Christian R H Raetz Otto Geiger

Lysyl-phosphatidylglycerol (LPG) is a well-known membrane lipid in several gram-positive bacteria but is almost unheard of in gram-negative bacteria. In Staphylococcus aureus, the gene product of mprF is responsible for LPG formation. Low pH-inducible genes, termed IpiA, have been identified in the gram-negative alpha-proteobacteria Rhizobium tropici and Sinorhizobium medicae in screens for aci...

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