A split-root growth system was used to study photosynthate partitioning
to
developing nodules and roots of
soybean (Glycine max L., Merr.). Opposite sides of the root systems
were inoculated with Bradyrhizobium
japonicum at 8 and 12 d after planting (early/delayed
inoculation treatment) or, alternatively, only one side was
inoculated 8 d after planting (early/uninoculated treatment). Plants
were incubated with 14CO2 at 24-h intervals
from early inoculation until the onset of N2 fixation
(acetylene reduction). After staining with Eriochrome black,
root and nodule meristematic structures were excised under a dissecting
microscope and their radioactivity
determined by scintillation counting. The specific radioactivity of nodule
structures increased with nodule
development, and was as much as 4 times higher in early nodules than in
roots
and nodules on half-roots receiving
delayed inoculation. By the time that N2 fixation could be measured
in
the first mature nodules, the early
inoculated half-root contained over 70% of the radioactivity recovered
from
the entire root systems of both
early/delayed and early/uninoculated treatments. These results
suggest
that developing nodules create a strong
sink for photosynthate, and that nodules and roots compete for current
photosynthate. Early initiated nodules
might develop at the expense of late initiated nodules, as well as at the
expense of the roots themselves.