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Accueil du site → Doctorat → Pays-Bas → 2018 → The evolution of determinate and indeterminate nodules within the Papilionoideae subfamily (Indigofera argentea collected in the desert of Jizan in Saudi Arabia)

Wageningen University (2018)

The evolution of determinate and indeterminate nodules within the Papilionoideae subfamily (Indigofera argentea collected in the desert of Jizan in Saudi Arabia)

Ren, Guiling

Titre : The evolution of determinate and indeterminate nodules within the Papilionoideae subfamily (Indigofera argentea collected in the desert of Jizan in Saudi Arabia)

Auteur : Ren, Guiling

Université de soutenance : Wageningen University

Grade : Doctor 2018

Résumé partiel
We selected the legume Indigofera argentea for our research. It was collected in the desert of Jizan in Saudi Arabia. We selected this species for two reasons. It is well adapted to heat and drought and therefore it has the potential to study, in the future, mechanisms that confer tolerance to these abiotic stresses. Further, Indigofera represents an early branching lineage within the indigoferoid/milletioid clade. Therefore, Indigofera is a key genus in studying the evolution of nodulation within the Papilionoideae subfamily.

In Chapter 1, a general introduction is given on nitrogen fixing symbiosis of legumes and rhizobia. In this introduction, we focus on the process of nodule initiation and organogenesis. Two main nodule types, determinate and indeterminate nodule, are introduced based on the knowledge of the few well-studied legumes species. Further, terminal differentiation of rhizobia that is induced by NCR peptides of the host is introduced.

In Chapter 2, we characterized the desert legume I. argentea and developed a platform by which future studies on mechanisms controlling abiotic stress become available. We developed an Agrobacterium rhizogenes-mediated root transformation procedure and did a de novo transcriptome assembly using RNA of various organs.

In Chapter 3, about 60 rhizobium strains have been isolated from nodulated I. argentea plants that were collected in the desert. The strains were characterized by 16S sequencing and their nodulation abilities were studied. One of the efficient nodulating Bradyrhizobium strains was selected for further studies.

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