Fate of Nodule-Specific Polysaccharide Produced by Bradyrhizobium japonicum Bacteroids.

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A polysaccharide produced by Bradyrhizobium japonicum bacteroids in nodules (NPS) on soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) roots is different in composition and structure from the extracellular polysaccharide produced in culture by this organism. Isogenic strains either capable or incapable of NPS synthesis supported similar rates of plant growth and nitrogenase activity, indicating that polysaccharide deposition was not detrimental. The possibility that NPS may have some protective or nutritional role for bacteroids was considered. Analysis of disintegrating nodules over periods of 1 to 3 months indicated greater recovery of viable bacteria from NPS+ nodules prior to the breakdown of NPS. During and after the breakdown of NPS, the decline in viable bacteria was similar for NPS+ and NPS- strains. Bacteroid destruction in senescing nodules may be accelerated by exposure to proteolytic enzymes in host cytoplasm; however, highly purified NPS had no significant effect on the in vitro activity of partially purified proteases, so protection of bacteroids via this mechanism is unlikely. B. japonicum USDA 438 did not utilize NPS as a carbon source for growth in liquid culture. In vitro assays of NPS depolymerase activity in cultured bacteria and bacteroids were negative using a variety of strains, all of which contained extracellular polysaccharide depolymerase. It seems highly unlikely that B. japonicum can utilize the polysaccharide it synthesizes in nodules, and NPS breakdown in senescing nodules is probably caused by saprophytic fungi.

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