Abstract

Rhizobium fredii USDA257 forms nitrogen-fixing nodules on soybean cultivar Peking, but not on cultivar McCall. This pattern of nodulation persists when McCall and Peking seedlings are cultivated together in plastic growth pouches. Reciprocal grafting experiments confirm that the root genotype, and not that of the shoot, regulates such cultivar specificity. When Peking roots are grafted onto McCall seedlings, the nodulation responses of roots similarly remain unaffected. Transposon-mutant 257DH4, which is derived from USDA257, can form nitrogen-fixing nodules on McCall. Such nodulation is blocked by the presence of USDA257 in the inoculum. Grafting experiments indicate that blocking is not due to a translocatable inhibitor produced by McCall roots or triggered by their interaction with USDA257. Thus, neither freely diffusible nor graft-transmissible substances are involved in cultivar-specific interactions of soybean with R. fredii and its derivatives.

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