symbiote
(noun)
An organism in a partnership with another such that each profits from their being together.
Examples of symbiote in the following topics:
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The Legume-Root Nodule Symbiosis
- Legumes have a symbiotic relationship with bacteria called rhizobia, which create ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen and help the plant.
- Many legumes have root nodules that provide a home for symbiotic nitrogen-fixing bacteria called rhizobia.
- However, when legume plants encounter low nitrogen conditions and want to form a symbiotic relationship with rhizobia they release flavinoids into the soil.
- The relationship between a host legume and the rhizobia is symbiotic, providing benefits to both participants.
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Nitrogen Fixation: Root and Bacteria Interactions
- Plants cannot extract the necessary nitrogen from soil, so they form symbiotic relationships with rhizobia that can fix it as ammonia.
- The most important source of BNF is the symbiotic interaction between soil bacteria and legume plants, including many crops important to humans.
- Soil bacteria, collectively called rhizobia, symbiotically interact with legume roots to form specialized structures called nodules in which nitrogen fixation takes place .
- Through symbiotic nitrogen fixation, the plant benefits from using an endless source of nitrogen from the atmosphere.
- Some common edible legumes, such as (a) peanuts, (b) beans, and (c) chickpeas, are able to interact symbiotically with soil bacteria that fix nitrogen.
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Mycorrhiza
- A mycorrhiza is a symbiotic association between a fungus and the roots of a vascular plant.
- A mycorrhiza is a symbiotic (generally mutualistic, but occasionally weakly pathogenic) association between a fungus and the roots of a vascular plant.
- Mycorrhizas are present in 92% of plant families studied (80% of species) , with arbuscular mycorrhizas being the ancestral and predominant form and the most prevalent symbiotic association found in the plant kingdom.
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Suppression and Alteration of Microbiota by Antimicrobials
- This is especially a problem when broad-spectrum antimicrobial agents are used, as antimicrobial treatments while helping to clear up pathogenic microbes from the body will often kill symbiotic bacteria.
- The treatment of translocated or pathogenic bacteria may necessitate the use of antibiotics that will kill symbiotic bacteria.
- Sometimes the use of broad-spectrum antimicrobial agents is unavoidable; in these situations, consuming foods such as yogurt which contains beneficial bacteria can replenish the body's symbiotic microbes.
- In extreme cases microbes can be transplanted from a healthy individual to someone with whose symbiotic microbes have been compromised.
- The oblong structures are Escherichia coli (E. coli), a symbiotic bacteria found in the human intestinal system.
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Mycorrhizae: The Symbiotic Relationship between Fungi and Roots
- Mycorrhizae, known as root fungi, form symbiotic associations with plant roots.
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Sea Coral and Sea Anemone Zooxanthellae
- Zooxanthellae refers to a variety of species that form symbiotic relationships with other marine organisms, particularly coral.
- Symbiodinium are colloquially called "zooxanthellae" (or "zoox"), and animals symbiotic with algae in this genus are said to be "zooxanthellate".
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Protists as Primary Producers, Food Sources, and Symbionts
- In this symbiotic relationship, these protists provide nutrients for the coral polyps that house them, giving corals a boost of energy to secrete a calcium carbonate skeleton .
- This type of symbiotic relationship is important in nutrient-poor environments.
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Symbiosis
- Commensalism, mutualism, and parasitism are three symbiotic ways organisms interact with each other with differing degrees of benefit.
- Symbiotic relationships, or symbioses (plural), are close interactions between individuals of different species over an extended period of time which impact the abundance and distribution of the associating populations.
- A second type of symbiotic relationship, mutualism, is where two species both benefit from their interaction.
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Symbiosis between Bacteria and Eukaryotes
- Other bacteria live symbiotically with legume plants, providing the most important source of BNF.
- Soil bacteria, collectively called rhizobia, are able to symbiotically interact with legumes to form nodules: specialized structures where nitrogen fixation occurs .
- Through symbiotic nitrogen fixation, the plant benefits from using an endless source of nitrogen: the atmosphere.
- Soybean (Glycine max) is a legume that interacts symbiotically with the soil bacterium Bradyrhizobium japonicum to form specialized structures on the roots called nodules where nitrogen fixation occurs.
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Endosymbiosis and the Evolution of Eukaryotes
- Over many generations, a symbiotic relationship can result in two organisms that depend on each other so completely that neither could survive on its own.
- Schimper had tentatively proposed that green plants arose from a symbiotic union of two organisms.
- However, it now appears that they may be formed de novo, contradicting the idea that they have a symbiotic origin.
- It is believed that over millennia these endosymbionts transferred some of their own DNA to the host cell's nucleus during the evolutionary transition from a symbiotic community to an instituted eukaryotic cell (called "serial endosymbiosis").