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1.
Plasmids which contained wild-type or mutated Rhizobium meliloti nodulation (nod) genes were introduced into NodR. trifolii mutants ANU453 and ANU851 and tested for their ability to nodulate clover. Cloned wild-type and mutated R. meliloti nod gene segments restored ANU851 to Nod+, with the exception of nodD mutants. Similarly, wild-type and mutant R. meliloti nod genes complemented ANU453 to Nod+, except for nodCII mutants. Thus, ANU851 identifies the equivalent of the R. meliloti nodD genes, and ANU453 specifies the equivalent of the R. meliloti nodCII genes. In addition, cloned wild-type R. trifolii nod genes were introduced into seven R. meliloti Nod mutants. All seven mutants were restored to Nod+ on alfalfa. Our results indicate that these genes represent common nodulation functions and argue for an allelic relationship between nod genes in R. meliloti and R. trifolii.  相似文献   

2.
Summary R. meliloti primarily nodulates Medicago sativa but cannot nodulate Macroptilium atropurpureum. By introducing an 11.4 kb region into R. meliloti from the Symplasmid of Rhizobium strain MPIK3030, the host range of the R. meliloti transconjugants were shown to be extended to M. atropurpureum, one of the hosts of MPIK3030 but not normally nodulated by R. meliloti. The region responsible for host range extension was isolated by mass conjugating a clone bank from MPIK3030 into the R. meliloti wild type, and subsequent screening for nodulation on M. atropurpureum. Using deleted derivatives of a plasmid reisolated from endosymbiotic bacteria, the host range region was further narrowed down to three EcoRI fragments. Tn5 mutagenesis allowed the isolation of three discrete regions on an 11.4 kb section, which are involved in the extension of host range to M. atropurpureum. Finally, complementation experiments performed with R. meliloti common nod and hsn mutants indicated that none of the genes involved in the early steps of nodulation, including host-range functions, can be complemented by genes carried on the 11.4 kb fragment derived from MPIK3030.  相似文献   

3.
Summary A 70 kbp segment of the megaplasmid from a broad host range Rhizobium strain (MPIK3030) was mapped with the aid of cosmid clones made in the vector pJB8. A 7.9 kbp EcoRI fragment from this region, 55 kbp away from the nif gene cluster, was shown to hybridize to the common nod genes from R. meliloti. Using several R. meliloti nod probes it was possible to delimit an 830 bp region as being the center of greatest homology. Sequence data from two sections of this region gave a nucleotide homology of 73.7% to the nodC gene of R. meliloti. Using Tn5 mutagenesis a clone was isolated carrying Tn5 in the highly homologous region. When tested on Macroptilium atropurpureum, this MPIK3030 derivative was shown to have a Nod phenotype. When the wild-type allele was reintroduced into the Tn5 mutant, nodulation was restored. Interspecies complementation also showed that both R. meliloti and Rhizobium sp. MPIK3030 nod regions were able to restore nodulation to Tn5-induced nodC mutants from either strain.Dedicated to Professor Georg Melchers to celebrate his 50-year association with the journal  相似文献   

4.
By using cloned Rhizobium meliloti, Rhizobium leguminosarum, and Rhizobium sp. strain MPIK3030 nodulation (nod) genes as hybridization probes, homologous regions were detected in the slow-growing soybean symbiont Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110. These regions were found to cluster within a 25-kilobase (kb) region. Specific nod probes from R. meliloti were used to identify nodA-, nodB-, nodC-, and nodD-like sequences clustered on two adjacent HindIII restriction fragments of 3.9 and 5.6 kb. A 785-base-pair sequence was identified between nodD and nodABC. This sequence contained an open reading frame of 420 base pairs and was oriented in the same direction as nodABC. A specific nod probe from R. leguminosarum was used to identify nodIJ-like sequences which were also contained within the 5.6-kb HindIII fragment. A nod probe from Rhizobium sp. strain MPIK3030 was used to identify hsn (host specificity)-like sequences essential for the nodulation of siratro (Macroptilium atropurpureum) on a 3.3-kb HindIII fragment downstream of nodIJ. A transposon Tn5 insertion within this region prevented the nodulation of siratro, but caused little or no delay in the nodulation of soybean (Glycine max).  相似文献   

5.
Alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) releases different flavonoids from seeds and roots. Imbibing seeds discharge 3′,4′,5,7-substituted flavonoids; roots exude 5-deoxy molecules. Many, but not all, of these flavonoids induce nodulation (nod) genes in Rhizobium meliloti. The dominant flavonoid released from alfalfa seeds is identified here as quercetin-3-O-galactoside, a molecule that does not induce nod genes. Low concentrations (1-10 micromolar) of this compound, as well as luteolin-7-O-glucoside, another major flavonoid released from germinating seeds, and the aglycones, quercetin and luteolin, increase growth rate of R. meliloti in a defined minimal medium. Tests show that the 5,7-dihydroxyl substitution pattern on those molecules was primarily responsible for the growth effect, thus explaining how 5-deoxy flavonoids in root exudates fail to enhance growth of R. meliloti. Luteolin increases growth by a mechanism separate from its capacity to induce rhizobial nod genes, because it still enhanced growth rate of R. meliloti lacking functional copies of the three known nodD genes. Quercetin and luteolin also increased growth rate of Pseudomonas putida. They had no effect on growth rate of Bacillus subtilis or Agrobacterium tumefaciens, but they slowed growth of two fungal pathogens of alfalfa. These results suggest that alfalfa can create ecochemical zones for controlling soil microbes by releasing structurally different flavonoids from seeds and roots.  相似文献   

6.
The recA genes of Agrobacterium tumefaciens, Rhizobium meliloti, Rhizobium phaseoli and Rhodobacter sphaeroides, species belonging to the alpha-group bacteria of the Proteobacteria class, have been fused in vitro to the lacZ gene of Escherichia coli. By using a mini-Tn5 transposon derivative, each of these recA-lacZ fusions was introduced into the chromosome of each of the four species, and into that of E. coli. The recA genes of three of the alpha bacteria are induced by DNA damage when inserted in A. tumefaciens, R. phaseoli or R. meliloti chromosomes. The expression of the recA gene of R. sphaeroides is DNA damage-mediated only when present in its own chromosome; none of the genes is induced in E. coli. Likewise, the recA gene of E. coli is not induced in any of the four alpha species. These data indicate that A. tumefaciens, R. meliloti and R. phaseoli possess a LexA-like repressor, which is able to block the expression of their recA genes, as well as that of R. sphaeroides, but not the recA gene of E. coli. The LexA repressor of R. sphaeroides does not repress the recA gene of A. tumefaciens, R. meliloti, R. phaseoli or E. coli.  相似文献   

7.
Rhizobium Ieguminosarum biovar phaseoli type II strain CIAT899 nodulates a wide range of hosts: Phaseolus vulgaris (beans), Leucaena esculenta (leucaena) and Macroptilium atropurpureum (siratro). A nodulation region from the symbiotic plasmid has been isolated and characterized. This region, which is contained in the overlapping cosmid clones pCV38 and pCV117, is able to induce nodutes in beans, leucaena and siratro roots when introduced in strains cured for the symbiotic plasmid, pSym. In addition, this cloned region extends the host range of Rhizobium meliloti and R. leguminosarum biovar (bv.) trifolii wild-type strains to nodulate beans. Analysis of constructed subclones indicates that a 6.4 kb Hin dlll fragment contains the essential genes required for nodule induction on all three hosts. Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. phaseoli type I strain CE3 nodulates only beans. However, CE3 transconjugants harbouring plasmid pCV3802 (which hybridized to a nodD heterologous probe), were capable of eliciting nodules on leucaena and siratro roots. Our results suggest that the CIAT899 DNA region hybridizing with the R. meliloti nodD detector is involved in the extension of host specificity to promote nodule formation in P. vulgaris, L. esculenta and M. atropurpureum.  相似文献   

8.
Rhizobium sp. SIN-1, a nitrogen-fixing symbiont of Sesbania aculeata and other tropical legumes, carries two copies of nodD, both on a sym plasmid. We have isolated these two nodD genes by screening a genomic library of Rhizobium sp. SIN-1 with a nodD probe from Sinorhizobium meliloti. Nucleotide sequence and the deduced amino acid sequence analysis indicated that the nodD genes of Rhizobium sp. SIN-1 are most closely related to those of R. tropici and Azorhziobium caulinodans. Rhizobium sp. SIN-1 nodD1 complemented a S. meliloti nodD1D2D3 negative mutant for nodulation on alfalfa, but failed to complement a nodD1 mutant of S. fredii USDA191 for soybean nodulation. A hybrid nodD gene, containing the N-terminus of S. fredii USDA191 nodD1 and the C-terminus of Rhizobium sp. SIN-1 nodD1, complemented the nodD1 negative mutant of USDA191 for nodulation on soybean. Received: 17 January 2002 / Accepted: 18 February 2002  相似文献   

9.
Symbiotic DNA sequences involved in nodulation by Rhizobium must include genes responsible for recognizing homologous hosts. We sought these genes by mobilizing the symbiotic plasmid of a broad host-range Rhizobium MPIK3030 (= NGR234) that can nodulate Glycine max, Psophocarpus tetragonolobus, Vigna unguiculata, etc., into two Nod- Rhizobium mutants as well as into Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Subsequently, cosmid clones of pMPIK3030a were mobilized into Nod+ Rhizobium that cannot nodulate the chosen hosts. Nodule development was monitored by examining the ultrastructure of nodules formed by the transconjugants. pMPIK3030a could complement Nod- and Nif- deletions in R. leguminosarum and R. meliloti as well as enable A. tumefaciens to nodulate. Three non-overlapping sets of cosmids were found that conferred upon a slow-growing Rhizobium species, as well as on R. loti and R. meliloti, the ability to nodulate Psophocarpus and Vigna, thus pointing to the existence of three sets of host-specificity genes. Recipients harboring these hsn regions had truly broadened host-range since they could nodulate both their original hosts as well as MPIK3030 hosts.  相似文献   

10.
Regulation of nod gene expression in Bradyrhizobium japonicum   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
Summary The best inducers of nod:: lacZ translational fusions in Bradyrhizobium japonicum are isoflavones, primarily genistein and daidzein. Upstream of the nodABC genes in B. japonicum is a novel gene, nodY, which is coregulated with nodABC. Measurements of the activity of lacZ fusions to the nodD gene of B. japonicum show that this gene is inducible by soybean seed extract and selected flavonoid chemicals. The induction of the nodY ABC and nodD operons appears to require a functional nodD gene, indicating that the nodD gene product controls its own synthesis as well as other nod genes.  相似文献   

11.
The addition of streptomycin to nonsterile soil suppressed the numbers of bacterial cells in the rhizosphere of alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) for several days, resulted in the enhanced growth of a streptomycin-resistant strain of Rhizobium meliloti, and increased the numbers of nodules on the alfalfa roots. A bacterial mixture inoculated into sterile soil inhibited the colonization of alfalfa roots by R. meliloti, caused a diminution in the number of nodules, and reduced plant growth. Enterobacter aerogenes, Pseudomonas marginalis, Acinetobacter sp., and Klebsiella pneumoniae suppressed the colonization by R. meliloti of roots grown on agar and reduced nodulation by R. meliloti, the suppression of nodulation being statistically significant for the first three species. Bradyrhizobium sp. and “Sarcina lutea” did not suppress root colonization nor nodulation by R. meliloti. The doubling times in the rhizosphere for E. aerogenes, P. marginalis, Acinetobacter sp., and K. pneumoniae were less and the doubling times for Bradyrhizobium sp. and “S. lutea” were greater than the doubling time of R. meliloti. Under the same conditions, Arthrobacter citreus injured alfalfa roots. We suggest that competition by soil bacteria reduces nodulation by rhizobia in soil and that the extent of inhibition is related to the growth rates of the rhizosphere bacteria.  相似文献   

12.
Luteolin, a flavone present in seed exudates of alfalfa, induces nodulation genes (nod) in Rhizobium meliloti and also serves as a biochemically specific chemoattractant for the bacterium. The present work shows that R. meliloti RCR2011 is capable of very similar chemotactic responses towards 4′,7-dihydroxyflavone, 4′,7-Dihydroxyflavanone, and 4,4′-dihydroxy-2-methoxychalcone, the three principal nod gene inducers secreted by alfalfa roots. Chemotactic responses to the root-secreted nod inducers in capillary assays were usually two- to four-fold above background and, for the flavone and flavonone, occurred at concentrations lower than those required for half-maximal induction of the nodABC genes. Complementation experiments indicated that the lack of chemotactic responsiveness to luteolin seen in nodD1 and nodA mutants of R. meliloti was not due to mutations in the nod genes, as previously thought. Thus, while nod gene induction and flavonoid chemotaxis have the same biochemical specificity, these two functions appear to have independent receptors or transduction pathways. The wild-type strain was found to suffer selective, spontaneous loss of chemotaxis towards flavonoids during laboratory subculture.  相似文献   

13.
14.
The recA genes of Agrobacterium tumefaciens, Rhizobium meliloti, Rhizobium phaseoli and Rhodobacter sphaeroides, species belonging to the alpha-group bacteria of the Proteobacteria class, have been fused in vitro to the lacZ gene of Escherichia coli. By using a mini-Tn5 transposon derivative, each of these recA-lacZ fusions was introduced into the chromosome of each of the four species, and into that of E. coli. The recA genes of three of the alpha bacteria are induced by DNA damage when inserted in A. tumefaciens, R. phaseoli or R. meliloti chromosomes. The expression of the recA gene of R. sphaeroides is DNA damage-mediated only when present in its own chromosome; none of the genes is induced in E. coli. Likewise, the recA gene of E. coli is not induced in any of the four alpha species. These data indicate that A. tumefaciens, R. meliloti and R. phaseoli possess a LexA-like repressor, which is able to block the expression of their recA genes, as well as that of R. sphaeroides, but not the recA gene of E. coli. The LexA repressor of R. sphaeroides does not repress the recA gene of A. tumefaciens, R. meliloti, R. phaseoli or E. coli.  相似文献   

15.
Rhizobium promoters involved in the formation of root nodules on leguminous plants are activated by flavonoids in plant root exudate. A series of Rhizobium strains which all contain the inducible Rhizobium leguminosarum nodA promoter fused to the Escherichia coli lacZ gene, and which differ only in the source of the regulatory nodD gene, were recently used to show that the regulatory nodD gene determines which flavonoids are able to activate the nodA promoter (HP Spaink, CA Wijffelman, E Pees, RJH Okker, BJJ Lugtenberg 1987 Nature 328: 337-340). Since these strains therefore are able to discriminate between various flavonoids, they were used to determine whether or not plants that are nodulated by R. leguminosarum produce different inducers. After chromatographic separation of root exudate constituents from Vicia sativa L. subsp. nigra (L.), V. hirsuta (L.) S.F. Gray, Pisum sativum L. cv Rondo, and Trifolium subterraneum L., the fractions were tested with a set of strains containing a nodD gene of R. leguminosarum, R. trifolii, or Rhizobium meliloti, respectively. It appeared that the source of nodD determined whether, and to what extent, the R. leguminosarum nodA promoter was induced. Lack of induction could not be attributed to the presence of inhibitors. Most of the inducers were able to activate the nodA promoter in the presence of one particular nodD gene only. The inducers that were active in the presence of the R. leguminosarum nodD gene were different in each root exudate.  相似文献   

16.
Summary A 6.7 kb HindIII fragment from the Sym-plasmid of strain NGR234 was found to code a nodD-like gene flanked by two loci which were required for siratro host range. Transfer of the 6.7 kb fragment from NGR234 to R. trifolii strain ANU843 conferred extended host range ability to this strain on siratro plants but not to other plants normally nodulated by strain NGR234. Tn5 mutagenesis of the 6.7 kb fragment showed that insertions located into loci flanking the nodD-like gene abolished the extended host range phenotype. A hybridization probe spanning one of the host specificity loci was shown to hybridize to three specific bands in the NGR234 genome. Complementation and DNA hybridization data showed that the nodD-like gene of strain NGR234 was functionally similar to that in R. trifolii. The introduction to R. trifolii of the 6.7 kb HindIII fragment containing Tn5 insertions located in the nodD-like gene did not abolish the ability to extend the host range of R. trifolii to siratro plants. However, transfer of the 6.7 kb HindIII to R. trifolii derivatives containing Tn5 insertions into either nodA, B or C or other R. trifolii nod genes failed to confer siratro nodulation to these recipients. Reconstruction experiments showed that the 6.7 kb fragment from strain NGR234 and the 14 kb nodulation region of R. trifolii could induce the nodulation of siratro plants when introduced together into Sym-plasmid-cured Rhizobium strains.  相似文献   

17.
The soil bacterium Sinorhizobium meliloti establishes nitrogen-fixing symbiosis with its leguminous host plant, alfalfa, following a series of continuous signal exchanges. The complexity of the changes of alfalfa root structures during symbiosis and the amount of S. meliloti genes with unknown functions raised the possibility that more S. meliloti genes may be required for early stages of the symbiosis. A positive functional screen of the entire S. meliloti genome for symbiotic genes was carried out using a modified in vivo expression technology. A group of genes and putative genes were found to be expressed in early stages of the symbiosis, and 23 of them were alfalfa root exudate inducible. These 23 genes were further separated into two groups based on their responses to apigenin, a known nodulation (nod) gene inducer. The group of six genes not inducible by apigenin included the lsrA gene, which is essential for the symbiosis, and the dgkA gene, which is involved in the synthesis of cyclic β-1,2-glucan required for the S. meliloti-alfalfa symbiosis. In the group of 17 apigenin-inducible genes, most have not been previously characterized in S. meliloti, and none of them belongs to the nod gene family. The identification of this large group of alfalfa root exudate-inducible S. meliloti genes suggests that the interactions in the early stages of the S. meliloti and alfalfa symbiosis could be complex and that further characterization of these genes will lead to a better understanding of the symbiosis.  相似文献   

18.
19.
The Rhizobium meliloti exoS gene is involved in regulating the production of succinoglycan, which plays a crucial role in the establishment of the symbiosis between R. meliloti Rm1021 and its host plant, alfalfa. The exoS96::Tn5 mutation causes the upregulation of the succinoglycan biosynthetic genes, thereby resulting in the overproduction of succinoglycan. Through cloning and sequencing, we found that the exoS gene is a close homolog of the Agrobacterium tumefaciens chvG gene, which has been proposed to encode the sensor protein of the ChvG-ChvI two-component regulatory system, a member of the EnvZ-OmpR family. Further analyses revealed the existence of a newly discovered A. tumefaciens chvI homolog located just upstream of the R. meliloti exoS gene. R. meliloti ChvI may serve as the response regulator of ExoS in a two-component regulatory system. By using ExoS-specific antibodies, it was found that the ExoS protein cofractionated with membrane proteins, suggesting that it is located in the cytoplasmic membrane. By using the same antibodies, it was shown that the exoS96::Tn5 allele encodes an N-terminal truncated derivative of ExoS. The cytoplasmic histidine kinase domain of ExoS was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified, as was the R. meliloti ChvI protein. The ChvI protein autophosphorylated in the presence of acetylphosphate, and the ExoS cytoplasmic domain fragment autophosphorylated at a histidine residue in the presence of ATP. The ChvI protein was phosphorylated in the presence of ATP only when the histidine kinase domain of ExoS was also present. We propose a model for regulation of succinoglycan production by R. meliloti through the ExoS-ChvI two-component regulatory system.  相似文献   

20.
Free-living Sinorhizobium meliloti lpxXL and acpXL mutants lack lipid A very-long-chain fatty acids (VLCFAs) and have reduced competitiveness in alfalfa. We demonstrate that LpxXL and AcpXL play important but distinct roles in bacteroid development and that LpxXL is essential for the modification of S. meliloti bacteroid lipid A with VLCFAs.Sinorhizobium meliloti and Brucella abortus form chronic intracellular infections within legumes and mammalian hosts, respectively (3, 20), and their BacA proteins play essential roles in these processes (8, 12). The precise function(s) of the BacA proteins has not been resolved, but free-living S. meliloti and B. abortus mutants lacking BacA have increased resistance to the glycopeptide bleomycin (9, 12) and there are ∼50% decreases in their lipid A very-long-chain fatty acid (VLCFA) contents (4, 7). It has also been determined that the increased resistance of an S. meliloti bacA null mutant to bleomycin and a truncated eukaryotic peptide, Bac71-16, is independent of its lipid A VLCFA alteration (6, 15). Together, these findings support a model in which BacA could have multiple nonoverlapping functions which lead to lipid A VLCFA modification and peptide uptake. The fact that two symbiotically defective S. meliloti BacA site-directed mutants (Q193G and R389G) (13) show defects in BacA-mediated lipid A VLCFA modification (4) but are still capable of peptide uptake (15) suggests that the S. meliloti lipid A VLCFA modification could play a key role in the symbiosis of this organism with alfalfa.Since the mechanism by which BacA leads to the lipid A VLCFA modification has not been resolved (4), S. meliloti mutants were constructed with mutations in the lpxXL and acpXL genes, which encode a lipid A VLCFA acyl transferase and a VLCFA acyl carrier protein directly involved in the biosynthesis of VLCFA-modified lipid A (5, 23). The S. meliloti lpxXL and acpXL mutants completely lack the lipid A VLCFA modification in their free-living states, but, unlike the S. meliloti bacA null mutant, these mutants can still form a successful symbiosis with alfalfa (5, 8, 23). However, the fact that the S. meliloti acpXL and lpxXL mutants are substantially less competitive in the alfalfa symbiosis than the parent strain (5, 23) indicates that the AcpXL and LpxXL proteins play important roles in at least one of the stages of the alfalfa symbiosis. Although the free-living S. meliloti acpXL and lpxXL mutants completely lack the lipid A VLCFA, they produce different species of lipid A (5). For example, in the absence of AcpXL, S. meliloti is able to modify lipid A with either C16:0 or C18:0 in the position normally modified with the VLCFA in the parent strain lipid A. This process is LpxXL dependent, as it does not occur in either an S. meliloti lpxXL single mutant or an S. meliloti acpXL lpxXL double mutant. In addition, since a Rhizobium leguminosarum acpXL mutant completely lacks the lipid A VLCFA modification in its free-living state but its lipid A is partially modified with the VLCFA to ∼58% of the amount in the parent strain lipid A during passage through peas (25), it is also possible that the S. meliloti acpXL mutant and possibly the S. meliloti lpxXL mutant undergo further lipid A changes during the interaction with alfalfa.In this study, we found that LpxXL and AcpXL play important but distinct roles in S. meliloti bacteroid development during alfalfa symbiosis. Additionally, we demonstrated that there is a minor host-induced AcpXL-independent mechanism by which S. meliloti bacteroid lipopolysaccharide (LPS) can be modified with the VLCFA. In contrast, we found that the LpxXL protein plays an essential role in the modification of S. meliloti bacteroids with VLCFAs.  相似文献   

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