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1.
A method has been developed for the rapid screening of Rhizobium japonicum colonies for hydrogenase activity based on their ability to reduce methylene blue in the presence of respiratory inhibitors and hydrogen. Hydrogen uptake-positive (Hup+) colonies derepressed for hydrogenase activity were visualized by their localized decolorization of filter paper disks impregnated with the dye. Appropriate responses were seen with a number of Hup+ and Hup wild-type strains of R. japonicum as well as Hup mutants. Its specificity was further confirmed in selected strains on the basis of comparisons with chemolithotrophic growth and the presence of other genetic markers. Utilization of the method in identifying Hup+ colonies among 16,000 merodiploid derivatives of the Hup mutant strain PJ17nal containing cloned DNA fragments of the Hup+ strain 122 DES has demonstrated its applicability as a screening procedure in the genetic analysis of the R. japonicum hydrogen uptake system.  相似文献   

2.
The existence of a hydrogen uptake host-regulated (Hup-hr) phenotype was established among the soybean bradyrhizobia. The Hup-hr phenotype is characterized by the expression of uptake hydrogenase activity in symbiosis with cowpea but not soybean. Uptake hydrogenase induction is not possible under free-living cultural conditions by using techniques developed for uptake hydrogenase-positive (Hup+) Bradyrhizobium japonicum. Hydrogen oxidation by Hup-hr phenotype USDA 61 in cowpea symbioses was significant because hydrogen evolution from nitrogen-fixing nodules was not detected. An examination for uptake hydrogenase activity in soybean and cowpea with 123 strains diverse in origin and serology identified 16 Hup+ and 28 Hup-hr phenotype strains; the remainder appeared to be Hup. The Hup-hr phenotype was associated with serogroups 31, 76, and 94, while strains belonging to serogroups 6, 31, 110, 122, 123, and 38/115 were Hup+. Hup+ strains of the 123 serogroup typed positive with USDA 129-specific antiserum. The presence of the uptake hydrogenase protein in cowpea bacteroids of Hup+ strains was demonstrated with immunoblot analyses by using antibodies against the 65-kDa subunit of uptake hydrogenase purified from strain SR470. However, the hydrogenase protein of Hup-hr strains was not detected. Results of Southern hybridization analyses with pHU1 showed the region of DNA with hydrogenase genes among Hup+ strains to be similar. Hybridization was also obtained with Hup-hr strains by using a variety of cloned DNA as probes including hydrogenase structural genes. Both hydrogenase structural genes also hybridized with the DNA of four Hup strains.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract A method has been developed for screening Rhizobium leguminosarum wild-type strains and mutants for uptake hydrogenase (Hup) activity, using H2-dependent methylene blue reduction. For this purpose, a simple device has been constructed which allows the simultaneous screening of 6 strains and 6 controls. Bacteroids of R. leguminosarum isolated from pea root nodules were suspended in buffer containing methylene blue and inhibitors of dehydrogenases. The suspensions were first sparged with argon (to remove oxygen) and then with hydrogen.  相似文献   

4.
Thirteen Rhizobium leguminosarum strains previously reported as H2-uptake hydrogenase positive (Hup+) or negative (Hup) were analyzed for the presence and conservation of DNA sequences homologous to cloned Bradyrhizobium japonicum hup-specific DNA from cosmid pHU1 (M. A. Cantrell, R. A. Haugland, and H. J. Evans, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 80:181-185, 1983). The Hup phenotype of these strains was reexamined by determining hydrogenase activity induced in bacteroids from pea nodules. Five strains, including H2 oxidation-ATP synthesis-coupled and -uncoupled strains, induced significant rates of H2-uptake hydrogenase activity and contained DNA sequences homologous to three probe DNA fragments (5.9-kilobase [kb] HindIII, 2.9-kb EcoRI, and 5.0-kb EcoRI) from pHU1. The pattern of genomic DNA HindIII and EcoRI fragments with significant homology to each of the three probes was identical in all five strains regardless of the H2-dependent ATP generation trait. The restriction fragments containing the homology totalled about 22 kb of DNA common to the five strains. In all instances the putative hup sequences were located on a plasmid that also contained nif genes. The molecular sizes of the identified hup-sym plasmids ranged between 184 and 212 megadaltons. No common DNA sequences homologous to B. japonicum hup DNA were found in genomic DNA from any of the eight remaining strains showing no significant hydrogenase activity in pea bacteroids. These results suggest that the identified DNA region contains genes essential for hydrogenase activity in R. leguminosarum and that its organization is highly conserved within Hup+ strains in this symbiotic species.  相似文献   

5.
The expression of cosmid-borne Bradyrhizobium japonicum hydrogenase genes in alfalfa, clover, and soybean nodules harboring Rhizobium transconjugants was studied. Cosmid pHU52 conferred hydrogen uptake (Hup) activity in both free-living bacteria and in nodules on the different plant hosts, although in nodules the instability of the cosmid resulted in low levels of Hup activity. In contrast, cosmid pHU1, which does not confer Hup activity on free-living bacteria, gave a Hup+ phenotype in nodules on alfalfa and soybean. Nodules formed by B. japonicum USDA 123Spc(pHU1) recycled about 90% of nitrogenase-mediated hydrogen evolution. Both subunits of hydrogenase (30- and 60-kilodalton polypeptides) were detected in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays of bacteroid preparations from nodules harboring B. japonicum strains with pHU1 or pHU52. Neither pHU53 nor pLAFR1 conferred detectable Hup activity in either nodules or free-living bacteria. Based on the physical maps of pHU1 and pHU52, it is suggested that a 5.5-kilobase EcoRI fragment unique to pHU52 contains a gene or part of a gene required for Hup activity in free-living bacteria but not in nodules. This conclusion is supported by the observation that two Tn5 insertions in the chromosome of B. japonicum USDA 122DES obtained by marker exchange with Tn5-mutagenized pHU1 abolished Hup activity in free-living bacteria but not in nodules.  相似文献   

6.
Strains of Rhizobium forming nitrogen-fixing symbioses with common bean were systematically examined for the presence of the uptake hydrogenase (hup) structural genes and expression of uptake hydrogenase (Hup) activity. DNA with homology to the hup structural genes of Bradyrhizobium japonicum was present in 100 of 248 strains examined. EcoRI fragments with molecular sizes of approximately 20.0 and 2.2 kb hybridized with an internal SacI fragment, which contains part of both bradyrhizobial hup structural genes. The DNA with homology to the hup genes was located on pSym of one of the bean rhizobia. Hup activity was observed in bean symbioses with 13 of 30 strains containing DNA homologous with the hup structural genes. However, the Hup activity was not sufficient to eliminate hydrogen evolution from the nodules. Varying the host plant with two of the Hup+ strains indicated that expression of Hup activity was host regulated, as has been reported with soybean, pea, and cowpea strains.  相似文献   

7.
The H2 is an obligate by-product of N-fixation. Recycling of H2 through uptake hydrogenase (Hup) inside the root nodules of leguminous plants is often considered an advantage for plants. However, many of the rhizobium-legume symbioses found in nature, especially those used in agriculture are shown to be Hup, with the plants releasing H2 produced by nitrogenase activity from root nodules into the surrounding rhizosphere. Recent studies have suggested that, H2 induces plant-growth-promoting rhizobacteria, which may explain the widespread of Hup symbioses in spite of the low energy efficiency of such associations. Wild legumes grown in Nova Scotia, Canada, were surveyed to determine if any plant-growth characteristics could give an indication of Hup choice in leguminous plants. Out of the plants sampled, two legumes, Securigera varia and Vicia cracca, showed Hup+ associations. Securigera varia exhibited robust root structure as compared with the other plants surveyed. Data from the literature and the results from this study suggested that plants with established root systems are more likely to form the energy-efficient Hup+ symbiotic relationships with rhizobia. Conversely, Hup associations could be beneficial to leguminous plants due to H2-oxidizing plant-growth-promoting rhizobacteria that allow plants to compete successfully, early in the growing season. However, some nodules from V. cracca tested Hup+, while others were Hup. This was similar to that observed in Glycine max and Pisum sativum, giving reason to believe that Hup choice might be affected by various internal and environmental factors.  相似文献   

8.
Fifty-four strains of Bradyrhizobium sp. (Lupinus) from worldwide collections were screened by a colony hybridization method for the presence of DNA sequences homologous to the structural genes of the Bradyrhizobium japonicum hydrogenase. Twelve strains exhibited strong colony hybridization signals, and subsequent Southern blot hybridization experiments showed that they fell into two different groups on the basis of the pattern of EcoRI fragments containing the homology to the hup probe. All strains in the first group (UPM860, UPM861, and 750) expressed uptake hydrogenase activity in symbiosis with Lupinus albus, Lupinus angustifolius, Lupinus luteus, and Ornithopus compressus, but both the rate of H2 uptake by bacteroids and the relative efficiency of N2 fixation (RE = 1 - [H2 evolved in air/acetylene reduced]) by nodules were markedly affected by the legume host. L. angustifolius was the less permissive host for hydrogenase expression in symbiosis with the three strains (average RE = 0.76), and O. compressus was the more permissive (average RE = 1.0). None of the strains in the second group expressed hydrogenase activity in lupine nodules, and only one exhibited low H2-uptake activity in symbiosis with O. compressus. The inability of these putative Hup+ strains to induce hydrogenase activity in lupine nodules is discussed on the basis of the legume host effect. Among the 42 strains showing no homology to the B. japonicum hup-specific probe in the colony hybridization assay, 10 were examined in symbiosis with L. angustifolius. The average RE for these strains was 0.51. However, one strain, IM43B, exhibited high RE values (higher than 0.80) and high levels of hydrogenase activity in symbiosis with L. angustifolius, L. albus, and L. luteus. In Southern blot hybridization experiments, no homology was detected between the B. japonicum hup-specific DNA probe and total DNA from vegetative cells or bacteroids from strain IM43B even under low stringency hybridization conditions. We conclude from these results that strain IM43B contains hup DNA sequences different from those in B. japonicum and in other lupine rhizobia strains.  相似文献   

9.
The effect of the Bradyrhizobium japonicum hydrogenase on nitrogen fixation was evaluated by comparing the growth of Vigna and Glycine species inoculated with a Hup mutant and its Hup+ revertant. In all experiments, the growth of plants inoculated with the strain without hydrogenase was at least equal to the growth of the strain with hydrogenase. For Glycine usuriensis and Glycine max cv. Hodgson in liquid culture, the growth was higher with the Hup strain. It is possible that reduced rates of nitrogen fixation in the presence of hydrogenase are due to O2 depletion caused by the hydrogen oxidizing, since the oxygen pressure in the air appears to be a limiting factor of symbiotic nitrogen fixation in the soybean.  相似文献   

10.
Hydrogen (H2) is a by-product of the symbiotic nitrogen fixation (N2 fixation) between legumes and root-nodule bacteria (rhizobia). Some rhizobial strains have an uptake hydrogenase enzyme (commonly referred to as Hup+) that recycles H2 within the nodules. Other rhizobia, described as Hup?, do not have the enzyme and the H2 produced diffuses from the nodules into the soil where it is consumed by microorganisms. The effect of this phenomenon on the soil biota and on the soil itself, and consequent stimulation of plant growth, has been demonstrated previously. Soybeans [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] cv. Leichhardt, inoculated with either a Hup+ strain (CB1809) or one of two Hup? strains (USDA442 or USDA16) of Bradyrhizobium japonicum and uninoculated soybeans, plus a non-legume control [capsicum (Capsicum annuum L.)] were grown in the field at Ayr, North Queensland, Australia. The objectives were to examine (1) relationships between N2 fixation and H2 emission, and (2) the influence H2-induced changes in soil might have during the legume phase and/or on the performance of a following crop. Strains CB1809 and USDA442 were highly effective in N2 fixation (“good” fixers); USDA16 was partly effective (“poor” fixer). The soil had a large but non-uniformly distributed naturalised population of B. japonicum and most uninoculated control plants formed nodules that fixed some N2. These naturalised strains were classified as “poor fixers” of N2 and were Hup+. H2 emissions from nodules were assessed for all treatments when the soybean crop was 62 days old. Other parameters of symbiotic N2 fixation and plant productivity were measured when the crop was 62 and 96 days old and at crop maturity. Immediately after final harvest, the land was sown to a crop of maize (Zea mays L.) in order to determine the consequences of H2 emission from the soybean crop on maize growth. It was estimated that soybeans inoculated with USDA442, the highly effective Hup strain of B. japonicum, fixed 117 kg shoot N/ha (or about 195 kg total N/ha if the fixed N associated with roots and nodules was taken into account), and contributed about 215,000 l H2 gas per hectare to the ecosystem over the life of the crop. The volume of H2 evolved from soybeans nodulated by the Hup+ strain CB1809 was only 6% of that emitted by the USDA442 treatment, but there was no indication that soybean inoculated with USDA442 benefited from the additional H2 input. The shoot biomass, grain yield, and amounts of N fixed (105 kg shoot N/ha, 175 kg total N/ha) by the CB1809 treatment were little less than for USDA442 plants. Three days after the soybean crop was harvested, the plots were over-sown with maize along the same row lines in which the soybeans had grown. This procedure exposed the maize roots to whatever influence soybean H2 emission might have had on the soil and/or the soil microflora immediately surrounding soybean nodules. The evidence for a positive effect of soybean H2 emission on maize production was equivocal. While the consistent differences between those pre-treatments that emitted H2 and those that did not indicated a trend, only one difference (out of the 12 parameters of maize productivity that were measured) was statistically significant at P?<?0.05. The findings need substantiation by further investigation.  相似文献   

11.
Field soybean plants were inoculated with Hup+ wild-type or H2 uptake-negative (Hup) mutants of Bradyrhizobium japonicum. For two consecutive summers we found an enrichment for acinetobacters associated with the surfaces of the H2-evolving nodules. Soybean root nodules that evolved H2 had up to 12 times more Acinetobacter spp. bacteria associated with their surfaces than did nodules incapable of evolving H2. All of the newly isolated strains identified as Acinetobacter obtained from the surfaces of root nodules, as well as known established Acinetobacter strains, were capable of oxidizing H2, a property not previously described for this alkane-degrading soil bacterium.  相似文献   

12.
13.
H2 evolved by alfalfa root nodules during the process of N2 fixation may be an important factor influencing the distribution of soil bacteria. To test this hypothesis under field conditions, over 700 bacterial isolates were obtained from fallow soil or from the 3-mm layer of soil surrounding alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) root nodules, alfalfa roots, or bindweed (Convolvulus arvensis L.) roots. Bacteria were isolated under either aerobic or microaerophilic conditions and were tested for their capacity to metabolize H2. Isolates showing net H2 uptake and 3H2 incorporation activity under laboratory conditions were assigned a Hup+ phenotype, whereas organisms with significant H2 output capacity were designated as a Hout+ phenotype. Under aerobic isolation conditions two Hup+ isolates were obtained, whereas under microaerophilic conditions five Hup+ and two Hout+ isolates were found. The nine isolates differed on the basis of 24 standard bacteriological characteristics or fatty acid composition. Five of the nine organisms were isolated from soil around root nodules, whereas the other four were found distributed among the other three soil environments. On the basis of the microaerophilic isolations, 4.8% of the total procaryotic isolates from soil around root nodules were capable of oxidizing H2, and 1.2% could produce H2. Two of the Hup+ isolates were identified as Rhizobium meliloti by root nodulation tests, but the fact that none of the isolates reduced C2H2 under the assay conditions suggested that the H2 metabolism traits were associated with various hydrogenase systems rather than with nitrogenase activity. Results from this study support the concept that H2 evolution by alfalfa root nodules has a significant effect on the surrounding microenvironment and influences the number and diversity of bacteria occupying that region.  相似文献   

14.
Uptake hydrogenase activity in nodules of green gram (Vigna radiata (L.) (Wilczek)), black gram (Vigna mungo (L.) (Hepper)), cowpea (Vigna unguiculata (L.) and cluster bean (Cyamopsis tetragonoloba (L.) (Taub.)), formed with two Hup+ (S24 and CT2014) and one Hup (M11)Rhizobium strains, was determined at different levels of external H2 in air atmosphere. Nodules of all the 4 host species formed by inoculation with strains S24 and CT2014, showed H2 uptake but not those formed with strain M11. H2 uptake rates were higher in 1 and 2% H2 in air atmosphere (v/v) than at 5 or 10% levels in all the host species. Variations in the relative rates of H2 uptake were observed both, due to host species as well as due toRhizobium strains. However, no host dependent complete repression of the expression of H2 uptake activity was observed in nodules of any of the host species formed with Hup+ strains.  相似文献   

15.
Twelve Tn5-induced mutants of Bradyrhizobium japonicum unable to grow chemoautotrophically with CO2 and H2 (Aut) were isolated. Five Aut mutants lacked hydrogen uptake activity (Hup). The other seven Aut mutants possessed wild-type levels of hydrogen uptake activity (Hup+), both in free-living culture and symbiotically. Three of the Hup mutants lacked hydrogenase activity both in free-living culture and as nodule bacteroids. The other two mutants were Hup only in free-living culture. The latter two mutants appeared to be hypersensitive to repression by oxygen, since Hup activity could be derepressed under 0.4% O2. All five Hup mutants expressed both ex planta and symbiotic nitrogenase activities. Two of the seven Aut Hup+ mutants expressed no free-living nitrogenase activity, but they did express it symbiotically. These two strains, plus one other Aut Hup+ mutant, had CO2 fixation activities 20 to 32% of the wild-type level. The cosmid pSH22, which was shown previously to contain hydrogenase-related genes of B. japonicum, was conjugated into each Aut mutant. The Aut Hup mutants that were Hup both in free-living culture and symbiotically were complemented by the cosmid. None of the other mutants was complemented by pSH22. Individual subcloned fragments of pSH22 were used to complement two of the Hup mutants.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of host plant cultivar on H2 evolution by root nodules was examined in symbioses between Pisum sativum L. and selected strains of Rhizobium leguminosarum. Hydrogen evolution from root nodules containing Rhizobium represents the sum of H2 produced by the nitrogenase enzyme complex and H2 oxidized by any uptake hydrogenase present in those bacterial cells. Relative efficiency (RE) calculated as RE = 1 − (H2 evolved in air/C2 H2 reduced) did not vary significantly among `Feltham First,' `Alaska,' and `JI1205' peas inoculated with R. leguminosarum strain 300, which lacks uptake hydrogenase activity (Hup). That observation suggests that the three host cultivars had no effect on H2 production by nitrogenase. However, RE of strain 128C53 was significantly (P ≤ 0.05) greater in symbiosis with cultivar JI1205 than in root nodules of Feltham First. At a similar rate of C2H2 reduction on a whole-plant basis, nearly 24 times more H2 was evolved from the Feltham First/128C53 symbiosis than from the JI1205/128C53 association. Root nodules from the Alaska/128C53 symbiosis had an intermediate RE over the entire study period, which extended from 21 to 36 days after planting. Direct assays of uptake hydrogenase by two methods showed significant (P ≤ 0.05) host cultivar effects on H2 uptake capacity of both strain 128C53 and the genetically related strain 3960. The 3H2 incorporation assay showed that strains 128C53 and 3960 in symbiosis with Feltham First had about 10% of the uptake hydrogenase activity measured in root nodules of Alaska or JI1205. These data are the first demonstration of significant host plant effects on rhizobial uptake hydrogenase in a single plant species.  相似文献   

17.
Pigeon peas (Cajanus cajan) were grown in large soil columns (90-cm length by 30-cm diameter) and inoculated with four different strains of cowpea rhizobia, which varied with respect to hydrogen uptake activity (Hup). Despite the profuse liberation of H2 from Hup- nodules in vitro, H2 gas was not detected in any of the soil columns. When H2 was injected into the columns, the rates of consumption were highest in the treatments (including control) containing Hup- nodules (218 and 177 nmol · h−1 · cm−2) and lowest in the Hup+ treatments (158, 92, and 64 nmoles · h−1 · cm−2). In situ H2 uptake rates in small soil cores at fixed distances from the nodules decreased exponentially with distance from the nodule (R2 = 0.99). This decrease in H2 consumption was associated with a similar decrease in numbers of H2-oxidizing chemolithotrophic bacteria as determined by the most-probable-number method. On the basis of two equations derived separately upon diffusive theory (Fix's Law) and kinetic theory (Michaelis-Menten), the empirically derived rate constants and coefficients indicated that all of the H2 emitted from Hup- nodules would be consumed by H2-oxidizing bacteria within a 3- to 4.5-cm radius of the nodule surface. It is concluded that H2 is not lost from the soil-plant ecosystem during N2 fixation in C. cajan but is conserved by H2-oxidizing bacteria.  相似文献   

18.
Peas (Pisum sativum L.) were inoculated with strains of Rhizobium leguminosarum having different levels of uptake hydrogenase (Hup) activity and were grown in sterile Leonard jars under controlled conditions. Rates of H2 evolution and acetylene reduction were determined for intact nodulated roots at intervals after the onset of darkness or after removal of the shoots. Hup activity was estimated using treatment plants or equivalent plants from the growth chamber, by measuring the uptake of H2 or 3H2 in the presence of acetylene. In all cases, the rate of H2 evolution was a continuous function of the rate of acetylene reduction. In symbioses with no demonstrable Hup activity, H2 evolution increased in direct proportion to acetylene reduction and the slopes were similar with the Hup strains NA502 and 128C79. Hup activity was similar in strains 128C30 and 128C52 but significantly lower in strain 128C54. With these strains, the slopes of the H2 evolution versus acetylene reduction curves initially increased with acetylene reduction, but became constant and similar to those for the Hup strains at high rates of acetylene reduction. On these parallel portions of the curves, the decreases in H2 evolution by Hup+ strains were similar in magnitude to their H2-saturated rates of Hup activity. The curvilinear relationship between H2 evolution and acetylene reduction for a representative Hup+ strain (128C52) was the same, regardless of the experimental conditions used to vary the nitrogenase activity.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Summary Hydrogen uptake is thought to increase the efficiency of nitrogen fixation by recycling H2 produced by nitrogenase that would otherwise be lost by diffusion. Here we demonstrate the capacity of eight Rhizobium strains to take up molecular hydrogen. Uptake by nodule homogenates from Robinia pseudoacacia was measured amperometrically under nitrogenase repression. Markedly lower activities were found than in soybean nodules. In addition hydrogenase activity was detected by the ability of bacteroids to reduce methylene blue in the presence of hydrogen. It was demonstrated that hydrogenase structural genes are present in the black locust symbiont, Rhizobium sp. strain R1, using hybridization with a plasmid, which contained hydrogenase genes from R. leguminosarum bv. viceae.  相似文献   

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