Context: Chemical signals and nitrogen fixation. All organisms require nitrogen to grow. But while nitrogen is abundant on earth, most of it is in the form of an inert gas (N2) that is chemically unavailable to most organisms. To make it available it has to be 'fixed'-- combined with hydrogen to form ammonia (NH4) or combined with oxygen to form nitrate (NO3).
This conversion can happen in several ways, but by far the most important is nitrogen fixation by bacteria. Some of these bacteria are free-living, while others form symbioses with plants or other organisms like termites. The vast majority of nitrogen fixation is carried out by symbiotic bacteria living in legumes like beans, clover and alfalfa.
Farming takes advantage of this, growing legumes in rotation with other crops that require nitrogen. The legumes replenish nitrogen in the soil, which can then be used by crops that don't fix nitrogen. This approach is crucial to increase crop yields while reducing the environmental costs of heavy dependence on agricultural chemicals.
For all this to work, nitrogen-fixing bacteria in the soil must be able to locate the seedling legumes as their roots begin to grow and then initiate the symbiotic relationship with the plants. This begins as the seedlings send out a chemical signal into the soil. In alfalfa, for example, the root exudes a unique mixture of flavonoid signals which attracts the specific species of bacterium that is specialized for symbiosis with alfalfa.
The alfalfa signals bind with bacterial receptors that initiate synthesis of proteins which, in turn, send a signal back to the plant's DNA, instructing it to start making the root nodules which house the bacteria as it fixes nitrogen.
Soil contains a mixture of different nitrogen-fixing bacteria and different species of host plants. The chemical signals sent by the plants and the response by the bacteria help ensure that the bacteria find their proper host. Chemical signals from the wrong plant can actually be antagonistic, delaying or suppressing the process that leads to symbiosis formation, and hence nitrogen fixation. This vulnerability to antagonism by the signals from the wrong plant host is the basis for vulnerability to disruption by synthetic chemicals that Fox et al. have discovered.
In addition to interacting with the bacteria's receptors, flavonoids can also bind with animal estrogen receptors and provoke estrogenic responses. They are one of many estrogenic substances (phytoestrogens) that plants produce naturally.
More on nitrogen fixation. |
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What did they do? Fox et al. grew alfalfa in the lab and measured aspects of plant growth over a six week period depending upon the treatments to which they were exposed. They measured the number of plants, the number of root nodules, plant yield (dry biomass), and the activity level of the bacterial enzyme, nitrogenase, which fixes nitrogen.
Half of the plants were innoculated with Sinorhizobium meliloti, the species of rhizobial bacterial uniquely adapted to alfalfa. The other half received no nitrogen-fixing bacteria.
Subgroups of these plants were then exposed to five contaminants that previous research had shown were capable of intefering with plant-bacterial signaling: pentachlorophenol, bisphenol A, DDT, methyl parathion and chrysin. The first four are synthetic chemicals used in agriculture and industry. Chrysin is a signaling molecule used by clover to communicate with its own symbiotic bacterium.
In other words, in their experiment that had 10 treatments:
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with Rhizobium |
without Rhizobium |
Pentachlorophenol |
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- |
Bisphenol A |
+ |
- |
DDT |
+ |
- |
Methyl Parathion |
+ |
- |
Chrysin |
+ |
- |
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DDT, methyl parathion and pentachlorophenol are insecticides; pentachlorophenol is also a wood preservative. Bisphenol A is a plastic monomer used to make polycarbonate plastic and epoxy resins. Chrysin is a phytoestrogen from clover, another legume.
Each treatment was replicated 5 times and measured at 2, 4 and 6 weeks after Rhizobium innoculation.
What did they find? Alfalfa innoculated with Rhizobium and untreated with chemicals grew best (see graph below). Alfalfa lacking Rhizobium, or alfalfa with Rhizobium and also treated with pentachlorophenol, grew worst. These patterns were seen for numbers of nodules grown per plant, nitrogenase activity and plant yield.
adapted from Fox et al.
Treatment by each of the contaminants decreased plant yield compared to untreated alfalfa innoculated with Rhizobium. This persisted throughout the 6 week assessment period. In contrast, by week 6 Chrysin treated alfalfa (with Rhizobium) did not differ from Rhizobium-innoculated, contaminant free alfalfa. |