Abstract

Abstract. Soybean nodules showed the ability to adapt to oxygen pressures above and below ambient levels and this adaptation involved a decrease in cortical intercellular air‐spaces with increasing oxygen pressure. Nodules were grown in oxygen pressures from 4.7 to 75 kPa and the decrease in number and size of cortical intercellular spaces with increasing oxygen pressure was the result of a change in cell structure and the deposition of an electron dense material within intercellular spaces. Exposure to a saturating pressure of acetylene caused a similar inhibition of respiration and nitrogenase activity in nodules developed in oxygen pressures from 4.7 to 47 kPa, suggesting that putative acetylene‐induced changes in oxygen diffusion resistance occur by a different mechanism than that involved in long‐term adaptation to oxygen. However, in nodules grown at 75 kPa oxygen, the initial specific activities were lower and did not show an acetylene induced decline. The results are discussed in terms of the current theories of regulation of nitrogenase activity by oxygen availability.

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