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1.

Background and aims

Burkholderia phymatum strain GR01 is a recently reported common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) symbiont isolated from nodules of plants grown in semi-arid soils in Morocco. The osmotolerance of B. phymatum GR01N under free-living and in symbiotic association with P. vulgaris was investigated in this study.

Methods

The osmotolerance of B. phymatum GR01N was checked by growing cells in the presence of varying concentrations of NaCl or sucrose, and the cellular solutes were analyzed in cell extracts by 13C-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Nodule occupancy was checked in P. vulgaris grown in the presence of 25, 35 or 50 mM NaCl and inoculated with a mixture of B. phymatum GR01N and R. tropici CIAT899R cells. The effect of salt stress on nodule biomass, plant dry weight, plant nitrogen content and leghaemoglobin content of nodules was also analyzed in plants inoculated with either B. phymatum GR01N or R. tropici CIAT899R and grown in the presence of 25 or 35 mM NaCl.

Results

Burkholderia phymatum strain GR01N showed increased tolerance to osmotic stress under free-living conditions as compared to the reference strain R. tropici CIAT899R. Strain GR01N accumulated trehalose, mannitol and alanine in response to saline stress, suggesting their role in the observed osmoloterance. Under conditions of saline stress, P. vulgaris plants nodulated by B. phymatum GR01N showed increased plant dry weight and nitrogen fixation, when compared to those inoculated with R. tropici CIAT899R. Nodule competition assays revealed that B. phymatum GR01N had higher levels of nodule occupancy than R. tropici CIAT899R in P. vulgaris plants grown under saline conditions.

Conclusions

Burkholderia phymatum strain GR01N displays a remarkable osmotolerance under free-living and symbiotic conditions.  相似文献   

2.
Rhizobium tropici CIAT899 induced chlorosis in the leaves of its symbiotic hosts, common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.), siratro (Macroptilium atropurpureum Urb.), and Leucaena leucocephala (Lam.) de Wit. Chlorosis induction by strains CIAT899 and CT9005, an exopolysaccharide-deficient mutant of CIAT899, required carbon substrate. When the bacteria were added at planting in a solution of mannitol (50 g/liter), as few as 103 cells of CIAT899 were sufficient to induce chlorosis in bean plants. All carbon sources tested, including organic acids and mono- and disaccharides, supported chlorosis induction. The addition of a carbon source did not affect the growth rate or the population density of CT9005 in the bean plant rhizosphere. Cell-free filtrates of cultures of CT9005 did not induce detectable chlorosis. All type B strains of R. tropici tested also induced chlorosis in common bean. Type A strains of R. tropici and all other species of bacteria tested did not induce chlorosis. Several lines of evidence indicated that nodulation was not required for chlorosis induction. Strain RSP900, a pSym-cured derivative of CIAT899, induced chlorosis in wild-type P. vulgaris. In addition, NOD125, a nodulation-defective line of common bean, developed chlorosis when inoculated with CIAT899, but did not develop nodules. CIAT899 consistently induced severe chlorosis in the leaves of the nonhost legumes alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) and Berseem clover (Trifolium alexandrinum L.), and induced chlorosis in 29 to 58% of the plants tested of sunflower, cucumber, and tomato seedlings, but it did not induce chlorosis in the leaves of corn or wheat. Chlorosis induction in nonhost plants also required carbon substrate. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that R. tropici type B strains produce a chlorosis-inducing factor that affects a wide range of plant species.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Amplifiable DNA regions (amplicons) have been identified in the genome of Rhizobium etli. Here we report the isolation and molecular characterization of a symbiotic amplicon of Rhizobium tropici. To search for symbiotic amplicons, a cartridge containing a kanamycin resistance marker that responds to gene dosage and conditional origins of replication and transfer was inserted in the nodulation region of the symbiotic plasmid (pSym) of R. tropici CFN299. Derivatives harboring amplifications were selected by increasing the concentration of kanamycin in the cell culture. The amplified DNA region was mobilized into Escherichia coli and then into Agrobacterium tumefaciens. The 60-kb symbiotic amplicon, which we termed AMPRtrCFN299pc60, contains several nodulation and nitrogen fixation genes and is flanked by a novel insertion sequence ISRtr1. Amplification of AMPRtrCFN299pc60 through homologous recombination between ISRtr1 repeats increased the amount of Nod factors. Strikingly, the conjugal transfer of the amplicon into a plasmidless A. tumefaciens strain confers on the transconjugant the ability to produce R. tropici Nod factors and to nodulate Phaseolus vulgaris, indicating that R. tropici genes essential for the nodulation process are confined to an ampliable DNA region of the pSym.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of co-inoculating beans and soybeans with rhizobia and Chryseobacterium, a plant growth promoting bacteria (PGPR), was studied under conditions of mild saline stress. Chryseobacterium balustinum Aur9 was used with Rhizobium tropici CIAT899 or R. etli ISP42 to inoculate common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.), or jointly with Ensifer (Sinorhizobium) fredii SMH12 and HH103 to inoculate soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merrill). The effect of co-inoculation was studied by following nodule primordia initiation, nodulation kinetics and symbiotic performance in plants grown under moderate saline conditions (25 mM NaCl). In common bean, co-inoculation improved nodule primordia formation when compared with single inoculation (R. tropici CIAT899). However, co-inoculation did not provide benefits in the development of nodule primordia in soybean with E. fredii SMH12. The kinetic of nodulation in bean was also favored by double inocula resulting in a higher number of nodules. Long-term effects of co-inoculation on beans and soybeans depended on the rhizobial species used. In both, control and saline conditions, co-inoculation of R. tropici CIAT899 and C. balustinum Aur9 improved bean growth when compared with the single inoculation (CIAT899). However, the positive effect of double inocula on plant growth did not occur when using R. etli ISP42. Soybean plants receiving double inoculation (E. fredii SMH12 and C. balustinum Aur9) showed better symbiotic performance, mostly under saline stress, than with a single inoculation. The results indicate that co-inoculation with C. balustinum and rhizobia under mild saline conditions partially relieves the salt-stress effects, although do not always result advantageous for symbiotic N2 fixation in legume plants.  相似文献   

6.
Soil acidity and high temperature contribute to the failure of nodulation in the common bean. It is therefore urgent to select strains with a high competitive ability under these stress conditions. Two Egyptian Rhizobium etli strains, EBRI 2 and EBRI 26, were examined against Rhizobium tropici CIAT 899G labeled with the gus (β-glucuronidase) reporter gene. EBRI 2 and EBRI 26 were less competitive than CIAT 899G under acid conditions with both the Egyptian cultivar Giza 3 and the Colombian cultivar Rab 39. However, EBRI 2 and EBRI 26 gave higher nodule occupancy (78% and 62.5, respectively) than the nodule occupancy (18.5% and 35%) obtained by CIAT 899G at 35°C with cultivar Giza 3. Soil acidity (pH 5.8) was less detrimental to the nodule occupancy of EBRI 2 than EBRI 26 when they tested in competition with CIAT 899G.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Since Phaseolus vulgaris (L) is poorly nodulated in all regions of Tunisia where this crop is grown, the response of common-bean lines CocoT and Flamingo to inoculation with reference Rhizobium tropici CIAT 899 or native rhizobia, namely Sinorhizobium fredii 1a6, Rhizobium etli 12a3, and Rhizobium gallicum 8a3, was studied in a field station. Since R. etli 12a3 was found to be the most effective native rhizobium, it was subsequently compared with R. tropici CIAT 899 in a broader study in two stations over 3 years. A significant interaction between bean and rhizobia was observed for nodule number, shoot dry weight, grain yield, and contents of nitrogen and chlorophyll. The native rhizobia was more efficient than CIAT899 for Flamingo, though not for CocoT. The Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay technique was used with polyclonal antibody to assess the occupancy in nodule and persistence in soil of the inoculated rhizobia. For both stations the nodule occupancy was 100% during the first year for each rhizobium, but during the next 2 years, between 7 and 15% of nodules were formed by the rhizobia inoculated in the neighboring plot. It is concluded that the first-year inoculation is sufficient to maintain an adequate rate of nodulation during three growth cycles, and that the native R etli can be recommended for the common-bean inoculation in similar soils of Tunisia.  相似文献   

9.
Rhizobium tropici strain CIAT899 displays a high intrinsic thermal tolerance, and had been used in this work to study the molecular basis of bacterial responses to high temperature. We generated a collection of R. tropici CIAT899 mutants affected in thermal tolerance using TnS-luxAB mutagenesis and described the characterization of a mutant strain, CIAT899-10T, that fails to grow under conditions of high temperature. Strain CIAT899-10T carries a single transposon insertion in a gene showing a high degree of similarity with the guaB gene of Escherichia coli and other organisms, encoding the enzyme inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase. The guaB strain CIAT899-10T does not require guanine for growth due to an alternative pathway via xanthine dehydrogenase and, phenotypically, in addition to the thermal sensitivity, the mutant is also defective in symbiosis with beans, forming nodules that lack rhizobial content. Guanine and its precursors restore wild-type tolerance to grow at high temperature. Our data show that, in R. tropici, the production of guanine via inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase is essential for growth at extreme temperatures and for effective nodulation.  相似文献   

10.
Two Rhizobium etli strains, EBRI 2 and EBRI 26, isolated from Egypt were tested for nodulation competitiveness on beans using Rhizobium tropici CIAT 899G as the competing strain. The insertion of the gus-reporter transposon mTn5ssgusA30 did not alter the nodulation or nitrogen fixation capacity of mutant strain CIAT 899G compared to the wild type. At neutral pH, R. etli strains EBRI 2 and EBRI 26 were more competitive than CIAT 899G with the bean cultivar Saxa. These two strains gave nodule occupancies of 52.1 and 61.1% competing with equal cell numbers of CIAT 899G. Nodule occupancies from these two native strains increased with the bean cultivar Giza 6 from Egypt to 66 and 67.5%. Based on these results, cultivar Giza 6 was used to select the most competitive strains under stress of salinity or alkalinity as a major problem for a large part of Egyptian soils. Under stress of salinity (0.2% NaCl or 34.2 mM NaCl), the salt-sensitive strain EBRI 2 was more competitive than the salt-resistant strain EBRI 26. Strain EBRI 2 gave 87.4% but strain EBRI 26 gave 63.7% nodule occupancy against CIAT 899G. The same trend of results was observed under stress of alkalinity (pH 8). Strain EBRI 2 occupied 83% while Strain EBRI 26 occupied 53.2%.  相似文献   

11.

Background  

Associated with appropriate crop and soil management, inoculation of legumes with microbial biofertilizers can improve food legume yield and soil fertility and reduce pollution by inorganic fertilizers. Rhizospheric bacteria are subjected to osmotic stress imposed by drought and/or NaCl, two abiotic constraints frequently found in semi-arid lands. Osmostress response in bacteria involves the accumulation of small organic compounds called compatible solutes. Whereas most studies on rhizobial osmoadaptation have focussed on the model species Sinorhizobium meliloti, little is known on the osmoadaptive mechanisms used by native rhizobia, which are good sources of inoculants. In this work, we investigated the synthesis and accumulations of compatible solutes by four rhizobial strains isolated from root nodules of Phaseolus vulgaris in Tunisia, as well as by the reference strain Rhizobium tropici CIAT 899T.  相似文献   

12.
Rhizobium etli strain TAL182 and R. leguminosarum bv phaseoli strain 8002, both of which produce melanin pigment, were tested for their nodulation competitiveness on beans by paired inoculation with two strains which do not produce melanin: R. tropici strain CIAT899 and Rhizobium sp. strain TAL1145. An assay was developed to distinguish nodules formed by the melanin-producing and non-producing strains. Strain TAL182 had discrete competitive superiority over CIAT899 and TAL1145 for nodulation of beans. Nodulation competitiveness was not correlated with the ability to produce melanin pigment or the host range of the Rhizobium strains tested.The authors are with the Department of Plant Molecular Physiology, University of Hawaii, 3050 Maile Way, Gillmore 402, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA  相似文献   

13.
The effect of salt stress, under glasshouse conditions, was studied on plant biomass, nodulation, and activities of acid phosphatases (APase, EC 3.1.3.2) and trehalose 6-phosphate phosphatase (TPP, EC 3.1.3.12) in the symbiosis common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.)-rhizobia nodules. Four common bean recombinant inbred lines (147, 115, 104 and 83) were separately inoculated, with CIAT 899 or RhM11 strains and grown in hydroaeroponic culture. Two NaCl levels (0 and 25 mM NaCl plant?1 week?1 corresponding, respectively, to the control and the salt treatment) were applied and the culture was assessed during 42 days after their transplantation. The results showed that the nodulation of these lines was not affected by salinity except for the line 83 inoculated with CIAT 899, whose nodule dry weight decreased by 48.24 % compared with the corresponding controls. For the other symbiotic combinations, shoot and root biomasses were not significantly affected by salt constraint. Salinity stress generally reduced acid phosphatise and trehalose phosphate phosphatase activities in nodules that were less affected in plants inoculated with RhM11. Based on our data, it appears that nodule phosphatase activity may be involved in salinity tolerance in common beans and the levels of salt tolerance depend principally on specific combination of the rhizobial strain and the host cultivar.  相似文献   

14.
Common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) genotypes CocoT and Flamingo were inoculated with Rhizobium tropici CIAT899 and Glomus intraradices (Schenck & Smith) and grown under sufficient versus deficient phosphorus supply for comparing the effects of double inoculation on growth, nodulation, mycorrhization of the roots, phosphorus use efficiency and total nitrogen. Although the double inoculation induced a significant increase in all parameters whatever the phosphorus supply in comparison to control, significant differences were found among genotypes and treatments. Nevertheless, the highest phosphorus use efficiency and plant total nitrogen were found under P deficiency in combination with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. It is concluded that inoculation with rhizobia and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi could improve symbiotic nitrogen fixation even under phosphorus deficiency.  相似文献   

15.
This study compared the response of common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) to arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) and rhizobia strain inoculation. Two common bean genotypes i.e. CocoT and Flamingo varying in their effectiveness for nitrogen fixation were inoculated with Glomus intraradices and Rhizobium tropici CIAT899, and grown for 50 days in soil–sand substrate in glasshouse conditions. Inoculation of common bean plants with the AM fungi resulted in a significant increase in nodulation compared to plants without inoculation. The combined inoculation of AM fungi and rhizobia significantly increased various plant growth parameters compared to simple inoculated plants. In addition, the combined inoculation of AM fungi and rhizobia resulted in significantly higher nitrogen and phosphorus accumulation in the shoots of common bean plants and improved phosphorus use efficiency compared with their controls, which were not dually inoculated. It is concluded that inoculation with rhizobia and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi could improve the efficiency in phosphorus use for symbiotic nitrogen fixation especially under phosphorus deficiency.  相似文献   

16.
Soil organic phosphorus (Po) such as phytate, which comprises up to 80 % of total Po, must be hydrolyzed by specific enzymes called phytases to be used by plants. In contrast to plants, bacteria, such as Bacillus subtilis, have the ability to use phytate as the sole source of P due to the excretion of a beta-propeller phytase (BPP). In order to assess whether the B. subtilis BPP could make P available from phytate for the benefit of a nodulated legume, the P-sensitive recombinant inbred line RIL147 of Phaseolus vulgaris was grown under hydroaeroponic conditions with either 12.5 μM phytate (C6H18O24P6) or 75 μmol Pi (K2HPO4), and inoculated with Rhizobium tropici CIAT899 alone, or co-inoculated with both B. subtilis DSM 10 and CIAT899. The in situ RT-PCR of BPP genes displayed the most intense fluorescent BPP signal on root tips. Some BPP signal was found inside the root cortex and the endorhizosphere of the root tip, suggesting endophytic bacteria expressing BPP. However, the co-inoculation with B. subtilis was associated with a decrease in plant P content, nodulation and the subsequent plant growth. Such a competitive effect of B. subtilis on P acquisition from phytate in symbiotic nitrogen fixation might be circumvented if the rate of inoculation were reasoned in order to avoid the inhibition of nodulation by excess B. subtilis proliferation. It is concluded that B. subtilis BPP gene is expressed in P. vulgaris rhizosphere.  相似文献   

17.
One of the most adverse effects of phosphorus (P) deficiency on N2-fixing legumes is the generation of harmful active oxygen species which cause oxidative stress. And although oxidative stress has been widely studied in roots and shoots of various plant species, it has not yet sufficiently been documented in bean nodules so far. In this study, two recombinant inbred lines RIL115 (P-deficiency tolerant) and RIL147 (P-deficiency sensitive) of common bean and Concesa (local variety) were inoculated separately with the reference strain R. tropici CIAT899, RhM11 (R. gallicum) or RhM14 (R. tropici); two local strains of the Marrakesh region of Morocco. Nodulated plants were grown under semi-hydroponic conditions with sufficient or deficient P supply and analyzed for their oxidative responses at the flowering stage. The results indicated that P-deficiency decreased the growth of shoots (48 %) and nodules (32 %), particularly with RhM14 exhibiting the highest decrease (52 %) of nodulation. This constraint increased electrolyte leakage of nodules (40 %) as compared to leaves (20 %), especially for plants inoculated with RhM14 and CIAT899. Moreover, high H2O2 and malondialdehyde contents were noticed in P-deficient nodules of RhM14 and RhM11. These variations were associated with peroxidase activity stimulation in P-deficient nodules induced by CIAT899 and RhM14. In symbiosis with RIL115, these last strains exhibited the highest nodule phenol content. Overall, phenol content was mainly enhanced in P-deficient nodules (35 %) as compared to the leaves (16 %). It was concluded that the genotypes inoculated with CIAT899 and RhM11 are relatively P-deficiency tolerant combinations as compared to those inoculated with RhM14. Increase of oxidative stress in nodules rather than in leaves points to the need for further investigations of mechanisms that improve the root-nodule efficiency under adverse conditions.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Phaseolus vulgaris (common bean) was introduced to Kenya several centuries ago but the rhizobia that nodulate it in the country remain poorly characterised. To address this gap in knowledge, 178 isolates recovered from the root nodules of P. vulgaris cultivated in Kenya were genotyped stepwise by the analysis of genomic DNA fingerprints, PCR-RFLP and 16S rRNA, atpD, recA and nodC gene sequences. Results indicated that P. vulgaris in Kenya is nodulated by at least six Rhizobium genospecies, with most of the isolates belonging to Rhizobium phaseoli and a possibly novel Rhizobium species. Infrequently, isolates belonged to Rhizobium paranaense, Rhizobium leucaenae, Rhizobium sophoriradicis and Rhizobium aegyptiacum. Despite considerable core-gene heterogeneity among the isolates, only four nodC gene alleles were observed indicating conservation within this gene. Testing of the capacity of the isolates to fix nitrogen (N2) in symbiosis with P. vulgaris revealed wide variations in effectiveness, with ten isolates comparable to Rhizobium tropici CIAT 899, a commercial inoculant strain for P. vulgaris. In addition to unveiling effective native rhizobial strains with potential as inoculants in Kenya, this study demonstrated that Kenyan soils harbour diverse P. vulgaris-nodulating rhizobia, some of which formed phylogenetic clusters distinct from known lineages. The native rhizobia differed by site, suggesting that field inoculation of P. vulgaris may need to be locally optimised.  相似文献   

20.
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