Abstract

In three ineffective associations between Medicago sativa (alfalfa) and Rhizobium meliloti the initial stages of nodule formation, resulting in the release of the bacteria into the host cells, were found to follow the normal pattern of nodule development. In nodule tissue formed by two laboratory-produced ineffective mutants, a rapid disintegration of the invading bacteria was observed to occur shortly after the release of the bacteria into the plant cells. The disintegrating bacteria were in intimate association with large amounts of rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER). An increase in the number of mitochondria occurred at this stage as well and the peripheries of the plant cells were often lined with starch granules. Only occasionally was the stage of enclosing-membrane formation reached. In the third ineffective association, a naturally occurring one, the bacteria were transformed into the nitrogen-fixing or bacteroidal forms and were surrounded by enclosing membranes. Dissolution of the bacteria occurred at a slightly later stage in this association and was again accompanied by a buildup of rough ER. Evidence is presented to suggest that the plant response, as characterized by this ER buildup in these ineffective associations, was a manifestation of nitrogen starvation.

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