Abstract
The fundamental importance of dinitrogen fixation for world agriculture, in relation to projected energy supplies, population pressure and food requirements over the next decades, obliges scientists to reconsider ways of exploiting this biological process. Genetic manipulation offers several options in principle. Existing symbiotic systems such as the legumes and seemingly inefficient systems such as the grass associations could be improved; new symbioses could be developed by
nif
gene transfer to rhizosphere commensals or by somatic hybridization of appropriate plants. A major advance would be to render plants independent of microbes by manipulation of expressable
nif
into the plant genome. This goal is discussed. It requires the complete genetic and physical characterization of
nif
in particular its regulation, and an understanding of the physiological background within which
nif
can be expressed, as well as the ability to fuse
nif
to alien genetic systems. Substantial progress in these directions has been made by using the n if genes of
Klebsiella pneumoniae
this progress is reviewed. Strategies for the further manipulation of
nif
towards regulated expression in the plant genome are considered.
Subject
Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Business, Management and Accounting,Materials Science (miscellaneous),Business and International Management
Reference2 articles.
1. The carbon balance of a legume and the functional economy of its root nodules. J.exp;Minchin F. R.;Bot.,1973
2. Energy requirement for symbiotic nitrogen fixation
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