Question
Biology Question on Nutrition
All of the following statements concerning the actinomycetes filamentous soil bacterium Frankia are correct except that Frankia :
can induce root nodules on many plant species
can fix nitrogen in the free-living state
like Rhizobium, it usually infects its host plant through root hair deformation and stimulates cell proliferation in the host's cortex
forms specialized vesicles in which the nitrogenase is protected from oxygen by a chemical barrier involving triterpene hopanoids
can fix nitrogen in the free-living state
Solution
Frankia is a type of filamentous bacterium capable of fixing nitrogen. It establishes a mutualistic relationship with a wide range of plants. Its infection mechanism involves root hair deformation, allowing it to penetrate cortical cells and trigger the formation of nodules similar to those induced by Rhizobium in legumes. Frankia produces three distinct cell types: sporangiospores, hyphae, and diazo-vesicles. During symbiosis, diazo-vesicles play a crucial role in supplying ample nitrogen to the host plant. They facilitate reductive nitrogen fixation, a process that converts atmospheric N2 gas into ammonia. To protect this process from molecular oxygen, numerous layers of tightly stacked hopanoid lipids act as a barrier.
So, the correct option is (B): can fix nitrogen in the free-living state