نتایج جستجو برای: limnaea truncatula

تعداد نتایج: 2030  

2014
Diana I. Trujillo Kevin A. T. Silverstein Nevin D. Young

The LEED..PEED (LP) gene family in Medicago truncatula (A17) is composed of 13 genes coding small putatively secreted peptides with one to two conserved domains of negatively charged residues. This family is not present in the genomes of Glycine max, Lotus japonicus, or the IRLC species Cicer arietinum. LP genes were also not detected in a Trifolium pratense draft genome or Pisum sativum nodule...

Journal: :Canadian journal of microbiology 2007
Y Badri K Zribi M Badri T Huguet P van Berkum M E Aouani

The rhizobia present in a single arid region Tunisian soil that nodulate Medicago laciniata and Medicago truncatula were compared. All isolates, 40 from each host, were Sinorhizobium meliloti based on 16S rRNA polymerase chain reaction restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) patterns and subsequent confirmation by sequence analysis of the 16S rRNA genes in four representatives from ...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2015
Joëlle Fournier Alice Teillet Mireille Chabaud Sergey Ivanov Andrea Genre Erik Limpens Fernanda de Carvalho-Niebel David G Barker

In many legumes, root entry of symbiotic nitrogen-fixing rhizobia occurs via host-constructed tubular tip-growing structures known as infection threads (ITs). Here, we have used a confocal microscopy live-tissue imaging approach to investigate early stages of IT formation in Medicago truncatula root hairs (RHs) expressing fluorescent protein fusion reporters. This has revealed that ITs only ini...

Journal: :The Plant cell 2010
Malick Mbengue Sylvie Camut Fernanda de Carvalho-Niebel Laurent Deslandes Solène Froidure Dörte Klaus-Heisen Sandra Moreau Susana Rivas Ton Timmers Christine Hervé Julie Cullimore Benoit Lefebvre

LYK3 is a lysin motif receptor-like kinase of Medicago truncatula, which is essential for the establishment of the nitrogen-fixing, root nodule symbiosis with Sinorhizobium meliloti. LYK3 is a putative receptor of S. meliloti Nod factor signals, but little is known of how it is regulated and how it transduces these symbiotic signals. In a screen for LYK3-interacting proteins, we identified M. t...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2008
Kathryn M Jones Natalya Sharopova Dasharath P Lohar Jennifer Q Zhang Kathryn A VandenBosch Graham C Walker

Sinorhizobium meliloti forms symbiotic, nitrogen-fixing nodules on the roots of Medicago truncatula. The bacteria invade and colonize the roots through structures called infection threads. S. meliloti unable to produce the exopolysaccharide succinoglycan are unable to establish a symbiosis because they are defective in initiating the production of infection threads and in invading the plant. He...

Journal: :Veterinary research 1999
M Abrous D Rondelaud G Dreyfuss J Cabaret

Natural infection of Lymnaea glabra and Lymnaea truncatula by Fasciola hepatica and/or Paramphistomum daubneyi was studied at two periods of risk (June-July and September-October) in 11 French farms known for their high prevalences of F. hepatica infection in ruminants. A total of 1,778 L. truncatula and 2,396 L. glabra measuring 6 mm or more in height were collected to determine the prevalence...

2014
Chenjia Shen Runqing Yue Yanjun Yang Lei Zhang Tao Sun Luqin Xu Shuanggui Tie Huizhong Wang Ive De Smet

BACKGROUND Auxin/indoleacetic acid (Aux/IAA) genes, coding a family of short-lived nuclear proteins, play key roles in wide variety of plant developmental processes, including root system regulation and responses to environmental stimulus. However, how they function in auxin signaling pathway and symbiosis with rhizobial in Medicago truncatula are largely unknown. The present study aims at gain...

Journal: :Plant physiology 2007
Verena Tellström Björn Usadel Oliver Thimm Mark Stitt Helge Küster Karsten Niehaus

In the establishment of symbiosis between Medicago truncatula and the nitrogen-fixing bacterium Sinorhizobium meliloti, the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of the microsymbiont plays an important role as a signal molecule. It has been shown in cell cultures that the LPS is able to suppress an elicitor-induced oxidative burst. To investigate the effect of S. meliloti LPS on defense-associated gene expr...

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