We previously found that the ethylene inhibitor Ag+ could overcome the inhibitory effect of nitrate on nodulation
of soybean (Glycine max) cv. Bragg. The same treatment increased nodulation quantitatively under non-inhibitory
conditions, strongly suggesting involvement of ethylene in the control of nodulation in this species.
Supernodulation mutants that lack internal autoregulation of nodulation, however, had biosynthesis capacity
similar to the wild type. In the present work, the effects of ethylene on nodulation of ‘Bragg’ and two separate,
but allelic, supernodulating mutants (nts382 and nts1007) were compared. The nodulation process appeared much
more sensitive than plant growth and development to ethylene, which reduced the number of nodules per plant,
but nearly twofold more in the wild type than in the supernodulation mutants. The cause–effect relationship is
established by the counteracting effect of Ag+ and the fact that the stronger the inhibition by ethylene, the higher
the recovery of nodulation ability with the ethylene antagonist. This higher tolerance of or lower sensitivity to
ethylene in nts382 persists even under low inoculum dose, where nodule number and mass could be decreased to
wild-type levels. Differences between the mutant and the wild type in the triple response test do not appear to
support differences in ethylene perception on a whole-plant basis. The results suggest that sensitivity of nodulation
to ethylene might have been affected in supernodulation mutants.