Abstract

We have studied intercellular colonization of wheat roots by Azorhizobium caulinodans and other diazotrophic bacteria, using strains marked with the lacZ reporter gene to facilitate their detection and identification. A. caulinodans was observed by light and electron microscopy to enter the roots of wheat at high frequency at the points of emergence of lateral roots (lateral root cracks). After lateral root crack colonization, bacteria moved into intercellular spaces within the cortical cell layer of roots. The flavonoid naringenin at 10 and 100 mmol m–3 significantly stimulated root colonization. The roles of the structural nodABC genes and the regulatory nodD gene were also studied; lateral root crack colonization of wheat was shown to be Nod factor‐ and NodD‐independent. Similar frequencies of lateral root crack colonization were observed following inoculation of wheat with Azospirillum brasilense. Colonization by A. brasilense was stimulated by naringenin and also by other flavonoid molecules.

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