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Journal of Bacteriology, October 1998, p. 5183-5191, Vol. 180, No. 19
Biology Department, Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
Received 17 April 1998/Accepted 28 July 1998
Rhizobium meliloti Rm1021 must be able to synthesize
succinoglycan in order to invade successfully the nodules which it
elicits on alfalfa and to establish an effective nitrogen-fixing
symbiosis. Using R. meliloti cells that express green
fluorescent protein (GFP), we have examined the nature of the symbiotic
deficiency of exo mutants that are defective or altered in
succinoglycan production. Our observations indicate that an
exoY mutant, which does not produce succinoglycan, is
symbiotically defective because it cannot initiate the formation of
infection threads. An exoZ mutant, which produces
succinoglycan without the acetyl modification, forms nitrogen-fixing
nodules on plants, but it exhibits a reduced efficiency in the
initiation and elongation of infection threads. An exoH
mutant, which produces symbiotically nonfunctional
high-molecular-weight succinoglycan that lacks the succinyl
modification, cannot form extended infection threads. Infection threads
initiate at a reduced rate and then abort before they reach the base of
the root hairs. Overproduction of succinoglycan by the
exoS96::Tn5 mutant does not reduce
the efficiency of infection thread initiation and elongation, but it
does significantly reduce the ability of this mutant to colonize the
curled root hairs, which is the first step of the invasion process. The
exoR95::Tn5 mutant, which
overproduces succinoglycan to an even greater extent than the
exoS96::Tn5 mutant, has completely lost its ability to colonize the curled root hairs. These new observations lead us to propose that succinoglycan is required for both
the initiation and elongation of infection threads during nodule
invasion and that excess production of succinoglycan interferes with
the ability of the rhizobia to colonize curled root hairs.
0021-9193/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Succinoglycan Is Required for Initiation and
Elongation of Infection Threads during Nodulation of Alfalfa by
Rhizobium meliloti
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: 68-633, Biology
Department, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02139. Phone: (617) 253-6716. Fax: (617) 253-2643. E-mail: gwalker{at}mit.edu.
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