Nitrogen gas (N₂) makes up 78% of Earth's atmosphere, but plants cannot use this form directly. The triple bond between nitrogen atoms is incredibly strong—it requires 945 kJ/mol to break .
Key insight: Biological nitrogen fixation is the process by which certain bacteria convert atmospheric N₂ into ammonia (NH₃) that plants can use. This is one of the most important biological processes on Earth—without it, life as we know it couldn't exist .
Only certain prokaryotes (bacteria and archaea) can fix nitrogen. They are called diazotrophs and exist in three main categories :
Form intimate associations with plants. Most important are rhizobia (with legumes) and Frankia (with actinorhizal plants like alder).
Live on or near root surfaces but not inside cells. Examples: Azospirillum associated with grasses.
Live independently in soil or water. Examples: Azotobacter, Clostridium, cyanobacteria.
By far the most agriculturally important is the symbiotic relationship between legumes (family Fabaceae) and rhizobia bacteria .
This mutualistic relationship benefits both partners:
Nodule formation is a complex, highly regulated process involving multiple signals :
Nod factors are lipochitooligosaccharides that act as key signaling molecules. Their structure determines host specificity—different rhizobia produce slightly different Nod factors, and plant receptors recognize only compatible ones. This is why Sinorhizobium meliloti nodulates alfalfa but not soybean .
Nitrogenase is the enzyme complex that actually fixes nitrogen. It consists of two components :
Note that this reaction also produces hydrogen gas (H₂)—an energy loss for the system .
Nitrogenase is extremely sensitive to oxygen—it's irreversibly damaged by O₂. Yet nitrogen fixation requires large amounts of ATP, which is most efficiently produced by aerobic respiration. Plants solve this paradox by :
Legumes form two main types of nodules :
| Feature | Determinate nodules | Indeterminate nodules |
|---|---|---|
| Shape | Spherical, no persistent meristem | Cylindrical, with persistent apical meristem |
| Development | Grow by cell expansion | Continually grow from tip |
| Infected cells | All cells infected uniformly | Zones of development: meristem, infection zone, fixation zone, senescence zone |
| Examples | Soybean, common bean, peanut | Pea, alfalfa, clover, faba bean |
Nitrogen fixation is energetically expensive. The plant must provide :
It's estimated that legumes expend about 12-17 g of carbon per gram of nitrogen fixed . This carbon comes from photosynthesis, which is why shading or defoliation reduces nitrogen fixation.
Trade-off: The plant must balance the energy cost of fixation against the benefit of obtaining nitrogen. Under high soil nitrogen, many legumes downregulate nodulation and nitrogen fixation because it's cheaper to take up available nitrogen .
| Factor | Effect | Optimal range |
|---|---|---|
| Soil nitrogen | High nitrate/ammonium inhibits nodulation and nitrogenase activity | Low to moderate |
| pH | Acidic soils reduce rhizobia survival and nodulation | 6.0-7.0 |
| Phosphorus | P is essential for ATP production; deficiency limits fixation | Adequate P |
| Water | Drought stress reduces photosynthesis and nodule activity | Field capacity |
| Temperature | Too cold or hot inhibits nodulation and fixation | 20-30°C |
Farmers can inoculate legume seeds with effective rhizobia strains to ensure good nodulation. Inoculants are available as :
Legumes in rotation provide nitrogen for subsequent crops. A good alfalfa or clover crop can fix 100-200 kg N/ha—equivalent to 200-400 kg of urea fertilizer .
Growing legumes with cereals (e.g., maize-bean intercropping) can improve nitrogen supply to the cereal, though competition for light and water must be managed .
Ethiopia is the world's second-largest producer of faba bean (Vicia faba), a major protein source. Faba bean forms indeterminate nodules and can fix significant nitrogen—up to 200 kg N/ha under good conditions .
Chickpea (Cicer arietinum) is another important legume in Ethiopia. Both crops are often grown in rotation with cereals (teff, wheat, barley), providing nitrogen for the subsequent crop and reducing fertilizer requirements .
Research in Ethiopia has shown that inoculation with effective rhizobia strains can increase faba bean yields by 20-40% in nitrogen-poor soils .
For decades, scientists have dreamed of engineering nitrogen fixation into cereals like maize, wheat, and rice. Approaches include :
Recent research has identified some nitrogen-fixing bacteria associated with maize roots in Mexico, suggesting that even cereals may have some capacity to benefit from biological nitrogen fixation .
| Topic | Key points |
|---|---|
| What fixes N₂? | Only prokaryotes (bacteria/archaea) have nitrogenase. Symbiotic rhizobia with legumes are most important agriculturally . |
| Nitrogenase | Enzyme complex requiring 16 ATP per N₂, extremely O₂-sensitive . |
| Oxygen protection | Leghemoglobin binds O₂, creating microaerobic environment in nodules . |
| Nodulation | Flavonoids → Nod factors → infection thread → nodule formation . |
| Energy cost | 12-17 g C per g N fixed; plants downregulate fixation when soil N is high . |
| Agricultural importance | Legumes can fix 100-200 kg N/ha; inoculation improves fixation; crop rotation benefits subsequent cereals . |
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