nodule
Katica Ilic
katica at acoma.Stanford.EDU
Fri Mar 11 15:30:54 EST 2005
It seems there is. I am not an expert, here is what I found about
Sebastania:
Sesbania rostrata is a native legume of West Africa. It forms a symbiotic
relationship with Azorhizobium caulinodans and is renowned for it's stem
nodulation. Both stem and root nodules fix nitrogen however root nodules
form at the curled root hair while stem nodules occur at the sites of
adventitious root primordia via "crack" entry. The stem nodules unlike the
root nodules contain functioning chloroplasts in the nodule cortex and are
therefore capable of carbon fixation.
http://www.personal.dundee.ac.uk/~rparsons/sesbania.htm
Katica
On Fri, 11 Mar 2005, Sue Rhee wrote:
> Are there any anatomical, morphological, lineage differences between the
> nodules in the primary/lateral root and the 'stem' nodules in the
> adventitious root? It seems like the introduction of 'stem nodule' for the
> nodules that are not really part of stem could lead to some confusion.
>
> Sue
>
> On Fri, 11 Mar 2005, Katica Ilic wrote:
>
> > Hi Jeff,
> >
> > Thanks for your comment.
> >
> > Would it be more appropriate to have 'root nodule' instead?
> > Actually to instantiate term 'nodule' to 'root nodule' and 'stem
> > nodule'?
> >
> > Katica
> >
> > On Fri, 11 Mar 2005, Jeff J. Doyle wrote:
> >
> > > >
> > > >PO:0003023
> > > >name: nodule
> > > >def: Enlargement or swelling on the roots of plants, particularly in the
> > > >Fabaceae, inhabited by nitrogen-fixing bacteria.
> > >
> > > There are also what are called "stem nodules" in some legumes (the
> > > papilionoid genus Sesbania is the prime example, but the caesalpiniod
> > > Neptunia also has nodules on floating stems). Stem nodules are
> > > associated with adventitious roots, however, so the definition is not
> > > actually incorrect, even if the position of the roots in question is
> > > not typical.
> > >
> > > --Jeff
> > >
> > >
> > > --
> > > Jeff J. Doyle
> > > Professor, L. H. Bailey Hortorium, Department of Plant Biology,
> > > Cornell University
> > > office: 259 Plant Science Building
> > > tel: 607 255-7972 (lab: 607 255-1953); fax: 607-255-5407
> > > http://www.plantbio.cornell.edu/faculty.php?PB=jjd5
> > >
> > > mailing address:
> > >
> > > Department of Plant Biology
> > > 228 Plant Science Building
> > > Cornell University
> > > Ithaca, NY 14853-4301
> > >
> >
> > --------------------------------------------------------------------------
> > Katica Ilic katica at acoma.stanford.edu
> > The Arabidopsis Information Resource Tel: (650) 325-1521 ext. 253
> > Carnegie Institution of Washington FAX: (650) 325-6857
> > Department of Plant Biology URL: http://arabidopsis.org/
> > 260 Panama St.
> > Stanford, CA 94305
> > U.S.A.
> > --------------------------------------------------------------------------
> >
> >
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Sue Rhee rhee at acoma.stanford.edu
> The Arabidopsis Information Resource URL: www.arabidopsis.org
> Carnegie Institution of Washington FAX: +1-650-325-6857
> Department of Plant Biology Tel: +1-650-325-1521 ext. 251
> 260 Panama St.
> Stanford, CA 94305
> U.S.A.
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
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Katica Ilic katica at acoma.stanford.edu
The Arabidopsis Information Resource Tel: (650) 325-1521 ext. 253
Carnegie Institution of Washington FAX: (650) 325-6857
Department of Plant Biology URL: http://arabidopsis.org/
260 Panama St.
Stanford, CA 94305
U.S.A.
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