67 research outputs found

    Irrigation management in relation to waterlogging and salinity: Precise for a research agenda in Pakistan

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    Waterlogging / Salinity / Water management / Agricultural production / Water balance / Water transfer / Research / Pakistan

    How to manage salinity in irrigated lands: a selective review with particular reference to irrigation in developing countries

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    Irrigation management / Irrigable land / Soil salinity / Water use efficiency / Soil degradation / Irrigated farming / Policy making / Developing countries

    Sugar-Binding Activity of Pea Lectin Expressed in White Clover Hairy Roots

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    Prospects for productive use of saline water in West Asia and North Africa

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    Correlation between extracellular fibrils and attachment of Rhizobium leguminosarum to pea root hair tips.

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    As part of a project meant to characterize molecules involved in nodulation, a semiquantitative microscopic assay was developed for measuring attachment of Rhizobium leguminosarum cells to pea root hair tips, i.e., the site at which R. leguminosarum initiates nodulation. This form of attachment, designated as cap formation, was dependent on the incubation pH and growth phase, with optimal attachment at pH 7.5 and with bacteria in the early stationary phase of growth. Addition of glucose to the growth medium delayed the initiation of the stationary phase and cap formation, suggesting a correlation between cap formation and carbon limitation. Attachment of R. leguminosarum was not inhibited by pea lectin haptens which makes it unlikely that lectins are involved under the tested conditions. Moreover, heterologous fast-growing rhizobia adhered equally well to pea root hair tips. Since the attachment characteristics of a Sym plasmid-cured derivative were indistinguishable from those of the wild-type strain, the Sym plasmidborne nodulation genes are not necessary for attachment. Sodium chloride and various other salts abolished attachment when present during the attachment assay in final concentrations of 100 mM. R. leguminosarum produced extracellular fibrils. A positive correlation between the percentage of fibrillated cells and the ability of the bacteria to form caps and to adhere to glass and erythrocytes was observed under various conditions, suggesting that these fibrils play a role in attachment of the bacteria to pea root hair tips, to glass, and to erythrocytes

    Roles of flagella, lipopolysaccharide, and a Ca2+-dependent cell surface protein in attachment of Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar viciae to pea root hair tips.

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    The relationship between Ca2+-dependent cell surface components of Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar viciae, motility, and ability to attach to pea root hair tips was investigated. In contrast to flagella and lipopolysaccharide, a small protein located on the cell surface was identified as the Ca2+-dependent adhesin

    Rhicadhesin-mediated attachment and virulence of an Agrobacterium tumefaciens chvB mutant can be restored by growth in a highly osmotic medium.

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    Cyclic beta-1,2-glucan is considered to play a role in osmoadaptation of members of the family Rhizobiaceae in hypotonic media. Agrobacterium tumefaciens chvB mutants, lacking beta-1,2-glucan, exhibit a pleiotropic phenotype, including nonmotility, attachment deficiency, and avirulence. Here we report that by growth of chvB mutant cells in tryptone-yeast extract medium supplemented with 7 mM CaCl2 and 100 mM NaCl, the mutant cells become motile, attach to pea root hair tips, and are virulent on Kalanchoë leaves. Moreover, whereas chvB mutants grown in tryptone-yeast extract medium containing 7 mM CaCl2 do not produce active rhicadhesin, addition of 100 mM NaCl to this medium resulted in restoration of rhicadhesin activity. The presence of CaCl2 appeared to be required for attachment, virulence, and activity of rhicadhesin. The results support a role for cyclic beta-1,2-glucan in osmoadaptation and strengthen the notion that rhicadhesin is required for attachment and virulence of A. tumefaciens

    A novel jasmonate- and elicitor-responsive element in the periwinkle secondary metabolite biosynthetic gene Str interacts with a jasmonate- and elicitor-inducible AP2-domain transcription factor, ORCA2.

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    Jasmonate (JA) is an important plant stress hormone that induces various plant defense responses, including the biosynthesis of protective secondary metabolites. The induction of the secondary metabolite biosynthetic gene Strictosidine synthase (Str) in Catharanthus roseus (periwinkle) cells by elicitor requires JA as a second messenger. A 42 bp region in the Str promoter is both necessary and sufficient for JA- and elicitor-responsive expression. This region is unlike other previously identified JA-responsive regions, and contains a GCC-box-like element. Yeast one-hybrid screening identified cDNAs encoding two AP2-domain proteins. These octadecanoid-derivative responsive Catharanthus AP2-domain (ORCA) proteins bind in a sequence-specific manner the JA- and elicitor-responsive element. ORCA2 trans-activates the Str promoter and its expression is rapidly inducible with JA and elicitor, whereas Orca1 is expressed constitutively. The results indicate that a GCC-box-like element and ORCA2 play key roles in JA- and elicitor-responsive expression of the terpenoid indole alkaloid biosynthetic gene Str

    Water productivity in agriculture: limits and opportunities for improvement

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    Water resource management / Productivity / Irrigated farming / Crop production / Rice / Salinity / Alkalinity / Plant propagation / Drought / Rain-fed farming / Arid lands / Groundwater / Recharge / Agroforestry / Potatoes / Wheat / GIS / Water deficit / Asia / Africa / India / Pakistan / Thailand / Syria / China / USA
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