Abstract
Cultures of Rhizobium japonicum were grown with vigorous aeration to stationary phase and were then incubated under restricted aeration for several days. Under these "microaerobic" conditions, cellular heme content increased 10-fold, and visible amounts of porphyrins were released into the culture medium. The two predominant porphyrins produced were identified, on the basis of their spectrophotometric and chromatographic properties, as protoporphyrin and coproporphyrin. The cytochrome complement of microaerobic cells partially resembled that of the symbiotic bacteria in that cytochromes alpha-alpha3 were absent and a CO-binding cytochrome 552 was present. During the period of restricted aeration, at the time that the heme content was increasing, there was a similar 10-fold increase in the activities of the first two enzymes of heme biosynthesis, delta-aminolevulinic acid synthase and delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydrase. However, during the same period, the activity of succinyl thiokinase (an enzyme that is required in large amounts whether or not heme is being produced) increased only twofold. These results suggest that reduced oxygen tension may play a role in inducing heme synthesis necessary for leghemoglobin formation and bacterial differentiation in soybean root nodules.
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