Abstract

ABSTRACT The present work investigates the relationships between nitrogen fixation, carbon metabolism and oxygen consumption by bacteroids of Mesorhizobium ciceri in root nodules of chick-pea plants. Its aim was to establish whether some of the compounds which accumulate under salt stress may be used as respiratory substrates by bacteroids to fuel their own metabolism and nitrogenase activity. Plants were grown in a growth chamber, and salt stress was induced by adding 50 mM NaCl to the nutrient solution at sowing. The data presented here show a rise in fermentative metabolism in nodules of chick-pea plants exposed to high salinity, and suggest that proline, lactate or ethanol, may play an important role as energy-yielding substrates for bacteroids in this plant species. The bacteroids could utilize glucose as a respiratory substrate both under control and saline conditions, while malate did not appear to be the preferred substrate in the presence of salt.

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