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1.
White clover plants were inoculated with transconjugant strain' 290 which was obtained from introduction of host specific nodulation genes of wild-type Rhizobium trifolii strain ANU 843 to Rhizobium leguminosarum strain 300. The characterization of root morphology of white clover induced by the transconjugant was observed and compared to the plants induced by the parent strains. White clover started tO form a typical root hair curling inoculated with transconjugant strain 290 24h after inoculation, at 48h a part of cell wall of root hair was degradated, infection thread was observed in the infected root hair cell, cortical cell divisions occurred extensively. All these characterizations were similar to that infected by strain ANU 843. Plant inoculation test indicated that no nodule was formed when inoculated by R. leguminosarum strain 300, while plants nodulated when inoculated with transconjugant strain 290 as well as R. trifolii ANU 843. This suggests that introduction of host specific nodulation genes of R. trifolii results in conferring the nodulation ability of R. leguminosarum on white clover.  相似文献   

2.
The establishment of rhizobia as nitrogen-fixing endosymbionts within legume root nodules requires the disruption of the plant cell wall to breach the host barrier at strategic infection sites in the root hair tip and at points of bacterial release from infection threads (IT) within the root cortex. We previously found that Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii uses its chromosomally encoded CelC2 cellulase to erode the noncrystalline wall at the apex of root hairs, thereby creating the primary portal of its entry into white clover roots. Here, we show that a recombinant derivative of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii ANU843 that constitutively overproduces the CelC2 enzyme has increased competitiveness in occupying aberrant nodule-like root structures on clover that are inefficient in nitrogen fixation. This aberrant symbiotic phenotype involves an extensive uncontrolled degradation of the host cell walls restricted to the expected infection sites at tips of deformed root hairs and significantly enlarged infection droplets at termini of wider IT within the nodule infection zone. Furthermore, signs of elevated plant host defense as indicated by reactive oxygen species production in root tissues were more evident during infection by the recombinant strain than its wild-type parent. Our data further support the role of the rhizobial CelC2 cell wall-degrading enzyme in primary infection, and show evidence of its importance in secondary symbiotic infection and tight regulation of its production to establish an effective nitrogen-fixing root nodule symbiosis.  相似文献   

3.
Axenic seedling bioassays were performed on white clover, vetch, and alfalfa to assess the variety and dose responses of biological activities exhibited by membrane chitolipooligosaccharides (CLOSs) from wild type Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii ANU843. Subnanomolar concentrations of CLOSs induced deformation of root hairs (Had) and increased the number of foci of cortical cell divisions (Ccd) in white clover, some of which developed into nodule meristems. In contrast, ANU843 CLOSs were unable to induce Had in alfalfa and required a 104-fold higher threshold concentration to induce this response in vetch. Also, ANU843 CLOSs were not mitogenic on either of these non-host legumes. In addition, CLOS action also increased chitinase activity in white clover root exudate. Thus, the membrane CLOSs from wild type R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii are fully capable of eliciting various symbiosis-related responses in white clover in the same concentration range as extracellular CLOSs of other rhizobia on their respective legume hosts. These results and our earlier studies indicate that membrane CLOSs represent one of many different classes of bioactive metabolites made by R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii which elicit more intense symbiosis-related responses in white clover than in other legumes. Therefore, CLOSs evidently play an important role in symbiotic development, but they may not be the sole determinant of host-range in the Rhizobium-clover symbiosis.Abbreviations Ccd cortical cell division - CLOS chitolipooligosaccharide - Had root hair deformation  相似文献   

4.
An extracellular metabolite purified from Rhizobium trifolii ANU843 was established as N-acetylglutamic acid (GluNAc) by 1H NMR and Fourier transform IR spectroscopy, gas chromatography/mass spectrometry of its methylated product, and organic synthesis. TLC analyses indicated that extracellular accumulation of GluNAc by R. trifolii ANU843 grown in defined BIII culture medium was dependent on induction of its bacterial nodulation (nod) genes and the positive regulatory gene nodD on its symbiotic plasmid. 1H NMR analyses showed less GluNAc in fractionated culture supernatants of nodL and nodM mutant derivatives of R. trifolii ANU843. GluNAc induced three morphological responses on axenic roots of white clover seedlings: (i) root hair branching; (ii) tip swelling followed by resumed elongation of root hairs; and (iii) a slight increase in foci of cortical cell divisions, which developed into nodule-like primordia. These biological activities of extracellular GluNAc from R. trifolii ANU843 were confirmed with authentic standards of GluNAc. These results indicate that extracellular accumulation of N-acetylglutamic acid is linked to flavone-dependent metabolism involving nodD, nodL, and nodM in R. trifolii ANU843. This constitutes the first report on the structure of a nod-dependent extracellular signal from R. trifolii that can affect root hair and nodule development in white clover and whose biological activity on this host has been confirmed with authentic standards.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The patterns of O-acetylation of the exopolysaccharide (EPS) from the Sym plasmid-cured derivatives of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii strain LPR5, R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii strain ANU843 and R. leguminosarum bv. viciae strain 248 were determined by 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy. Beside a site indicative of the chromosomal background, these strains have one site of O-acetylation in common, namely residue b of the repeating unit. The O-acetyl esterification pattern of EPS of the Sym plasmid-cured derivatives of strains LPR5, ANU843, and 248 was not altered by the introduction of a R. leguminosarum bv. viciae Sym plasmid or a R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii Sym plasmid. The induction of nod gene expression by growth of the bacteria in the presence of Vicia sativa plants or by the presence of the flavonoid naringenin, produced no significant changes in either amount or sites of O-acetyl substitution. Furthermore, no such changes were found in the EPS from a Rhizobium strain in which the nod genes are constitutively expressed. The substitution pattern of the exopolysaccharide from R. leguminosarum is, therefore, determined by the bacterial genome and is not influenced by genes present on the Sym plasmid. This conclusion is inconsistent with the suggestion of Philip-Hollingsworth et al. (Philip-Hollingsworth, S., Hollingsworth, R. I., Dazzo, F. B., Djordjevic, M. A., and Rolfe, B. G. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 5710-5714) that nod genes of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii, by influencing the acetylation pattern of EPS, determine the host specificity of nodulation.  相似文献   

7.
Yanni  Youssef G.  Rizk  R.Y.  Corich  V.  Squartini  A.  Ninke  K.  Philip-Hollingsworth  S.  Orgambide  G.  de Bruijn  F.  Stoltzfus  J.  Buckley  D.  Schmidt  T.M.  Mateos  P.F.  Ladha  J.K.  Dazzo  Frank B. 《Plant and Soil》1997,194(1-2):99-114
For over 7 centuries, production of rice (Oryza sativa L.) in Egypt has benefited from rotation with Egyptian berseem clover (Trifolium alexandrinum). The nitrogen supplied by this rotation replaces 25- 33% of the recommended rate of fertilizer-N application for rice production. This benefit to the rice cannot be explained solely by an increased availability of fixed N through mineralization of N- rich clover crop residues. Since rice normally supports a diverse microbial community of internal root colonists, we have examined the possibility that the clover symbiont, Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii colonizes rice roots endophytically in fields where these crops are rotated, and if so, whether this novel plant-microbe association benefits rice growth. MPN plant infection studies were performed on macerates of surface-sterilized rice roots inoculated on T. alexandrinum as the legume trap host. The results indicated that the root interior of rice grown in fields rotated with clover in the Nile Delta contained 106 clover-nodulating rhizobial endophytes g fresh weight of root. Plant tests plus microscopical, cultural, biochemical, and molecular structure studies indicated that the numerically dominant isolates of clover-nodulating rice endophytes represent 3 – 4 authentic strains of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii that were Nod Fix on berseem clover. Pure cultures of selected strains were able to colonize the interior of rice roots grown under gnotobiotic conditions. These rice endophytes were reisolated from surface-sterilized roots and shown by molecular methods to be the same as the original inoculant strains, thus verifying Koch's postulates. Two endophytic strains of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii significantly increased shoot and root growth of rice in growth chamber experiments, and grain yield plus agronomic fertilizer N-use efficiency of Giza-175 hybrid rice in a field inoculation experiment conducted in the Nile Delta. Thus, fields where rice has been grown in rotation with clover since antiquity contain Fix strains of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii that naturally colonize the rice root interior, and these true rhizobial endophytes have the potential to promote rice growth and productivity under laboratory and field conditions.  相似文献   

8.
The interaction between Rhizobium lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and white clover roots was examined. The Limulus lysate assay indicated that Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii (hereafter called R. trifolii) released LPS into the external root environment of slide cultures. Immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy showed that purified LPS from R. trifolii 0403 bound rapidly to root hair tips and infiltrated across the root hair wall. Infection thread formation in root hairs was promoted by preinoculation treatment of roots with R. trifolii LPS at a low dose (up to 5 micrograms per plant) but inhibited at a higher dose. This biological activity of LPS was restricted to the region of the root present at the time of exposure to LPS, higher with LPS from cells in the early stationary phase than in the mid-exponential phase, incubation time dependent, incapable of reversing inhibition of infection by NO3- or NH4+, and conserved among serologically distinct LPSs from several wild-type R. trifolii strains (0403, 2S-2, and ANU843). In contrast, infections were not increased by preinoculation treatment of roots with LPSs from R. leguminosarum bv. viciae strain 300, R. meliloti 102F28, or members of the family Enterobacteriaceae. Most infection threads developed successfully in root hairs pretreated with R. trifolii LPS, whereas many infections aborted near their origins and accumulated brown deposits if pretreated with LPS from R. meliloti 102F28. LPS from R. leguminosarum 300 also caused most infection threads to abort. Other specific responses of root hairs to infection-stimulating LPS from R. trifolii included acceleration of cytoplasmic streaming and production of novel proteins. Combined gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy and proton nuclear magnetic resonance analyses indicated that biologically active LPS from R. trifolii 0403 in the early stationary phase had less fucose but more 2-O-methylfucose, quinovosamine, 3,6-dideoxy-3-(methylamino)galactose, and noncarbohydrate substituents (O-methyl, N-methyl, and acetyl groups) on glycosyl components than did inactive LPS in the mid-exponential phase. We conclude that LPS-root hair interactions trigger metabolic events that have a significant impact on successful development of infection threads in this Rhizobium-legume symbiosis.  相似文献   

9.
Monospecific polyclonal antisera raised against Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii R39, a bacterium which was isolated originally from red clover nodules, were used to study the colonization of roots of leguminous and nonleguminous plants (Pisum sativum, Lupinus albus, Triticúm aestivum, and Zea mays) after inoculation. Eight weeks after inoculation of soil-grown plants, between 0.1 and 1% of the total bacterial population in the rhizospheres of all inoculated plants were identified as R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii R39. To characterize the associative colonization of the nonleguminous plants by R.leguminosarum bv. trifolii R39 in more detail, a time course study was performed with inoculated roots of Z. mays. R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii R39 was found almost exclusively in the rhizosphere soil and on the rhizoplane 4 weeks after inoculation. Colonization of inner root tissues was detected only occasionally at this time. During the process of attachment of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii R39 to the rhizoplane, bacterial lipopolysaccharides were overexpressed, and this may be important for plant-microbe interaction. Fourteen weeks after inoculation, microcolonies of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii R39 were detected in lysed cells of the root cortex as well as in intracellular space of central root cylinder cells. At the beginning of flowering (18 weeks after inoculation), the number of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii R39 organisms decreased in the rhizosphere soil, rhizoplane, and inner root tissue.  相似文献   

10.
The nifA gene has been identified between the fixX and nifB genes in the clover microsymbiont Rhizobium leguminosarum biovar trifolii (R.I. bv. trifolii) strain ANU843. Expression of the nifA gene is induced in the symbiotic state and site-directed mutagenesis experiments indicate that nifA expression is essential for symbiotic nitrogen fixation. Interestingly, the predicted R.I. bv. trifolii NifA protein lacks an N-terminal domain that is present in the homologous proteins from R.I. bv. viciae, Rhizobium meliloti, Bradyrhizobium japonicum, Klebsiella pneumoniae and all other documented NifA proteins. This indicates that this N-terminal domain is not essential for NifA function in R.I. bv. trifolii.  相似文献   

11.
We used bright-field, time-lapse video, cross-polarized, phase-contrast, and fluorescence microscopies to examine the influence of isolated chitolipooligosaccharides (CLOSs) from wild-type Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii on development of white clover root hairs, and the role of these bioactive glycolipids in primary host infection. CLOS action caused a threefold increase in the differentiation of root epidermal cells into root hairs. At maturity, root hairs were significantly longer because of an extended period of active elongation without a change in the elongation rate itself. Time-series image analysis showed that the morphological basis of CLOS-induced root hair deformation is a redirection of tip growth displaced from the medial axis as previously predicted. Further studies showed several newly described infection-related root hair responses to CLOSs, including the localized disruption of the normal crystallinity in cell wall architecture and the induction of new infection sites. The application of CLOS also enabled a NodC- mutant of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii to progress further in the infection process by inducing bright refractile spot modifications of the deformed root hair walls. However, CLOSs did not rescue the ability of the NodC- mutant to induce marked curlings or infection threads within root hairs. These results indicate that CLOS Nod factors elicit several host responses that modulate the growth dynamics and symbiont infectibility of white clover root hairs but that CLOSs alone are not sufficient to permit successful entry of the bacteria into root hairs during primary host infection in the Rhizobium-clover symbiosis.  相似文献   

12.
Insertion mutagenesis identified two negatively acting gene loci which restrict the ability of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii TA1 to infect the homologous host Trifolium subterraneum cv. Woogenellup. One locus was confirmed by DNA sequence analysis as the nodM gene, while the other locus, designated csn-1 (cultivar-specific nodulation), is not located on the symbiosis plasmid. The presence of these cultivar specificity loci could be suppressed by the introduction of the nodT gene from ANU843, a related R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii strain. Other nod genes, present in R. leguminosarum bv. viciae (including nodX) and R. meliloti, were capable of complementing R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii TA1 for nodulation on cultivar Woogenellup. Nodulation studies conducted with F2 seedlings from a cross between cultivar Geraldton and cultivar Woogenellup indicated that a single recessive gene, designated rwt1, is responsible for the Nod- association between strain TA1 and cultivar Woogenellup. Parallels can be drawn between this association and gene-for-gene systems common in interactions between plants and biotrophic pathogens.  相似文献   

13.
We have analyzed the nucleotide sequences of the nodX genes from two strains of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae able to nodulate Afghan peas (strains A1 and Himalaya) and from two strains of R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii (ANU843 and CSF). The nodX genes of strains A1 and ANU843 were shown to be functional for the induction of nodules on Afghan peas. To analyze the cause of phenotypic differences of strain A1 and strain TOM we have studied the composition of the lipochitin-oligosaccharides (LCOs) produced by strain A1 after induction by the flavonoid naringenin or various pea root exudates. The structural analysis of the LCOs by mass spectrometry revealed that strain A1 synthesizes a family of at least 23 different LCOs. The use of exudates instead of naringenin resulted only in quantitative differences in the ratios of various LCOs produced.  相似文献   

14.
The clover-nodulating Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii ANU794 initiates normal root-nodule development with abnormally low efficiency on the Trifolium subterraneum cv. Woogenellup. The cellular and developmental responses of Woogenellup roots to the site- and dose-defined inoculation of green fluorescent protein (gfp)-labeled cells of ANU843 (nodulation proficient) and ANU794 was investigated using light, fluorescence, and confocal microscopy. Strain ANU794-gfp induced three primordia types and four developmental responses at the inoculation site: true or aberrant nodules (on 5 and 25% of plants, respectively), hybrid structures (20% of plants), or lateral roots (50% of plants). The novel hybrid structures possessed nodule and lateral root-like features and unusual vascular patterning. Strain ANU794-gfp induces lateral root formation by stimulating pericycle cell divisions at all nearby protoxylem poles. Only true nodules induced by ANU794-gfp contained intracellular bacteria. In contrast, strain ANU843-gfp induced nodules only and lateral root formation was suppressed at spot inoculation sites. Primordium types were distinguishable by the emission spectrum characteristics of phenolic UV-absorbing and fluorescent compounds that accumulate in primordium cells. Hybrid primordia contained (at least) two fluorescent cell populations, suggesting that they are chimeric. The results suggest that ANU794 may produce both nodule- and lateral root-generating signals simultaneously.  相似文献   

15.
Several transposon Tn5-induced mutants of the broad-host-range Rhizobium sp. strain NGR234 produce little or no detectable acidic exopolysaccharide (EPS) and are unable to induce nitrogen-fixing nodules on Leucaena leucocephala var. Peru or siratro plants. The ability of these Exo- mutants to induce functioning nodules on Leucaena plants was restored by coinoculation with a Sym plasmid-cured (Nod- Exo+) derivative of parent strain NGR234, purified EPS from the parent strain, or the oligosaccharide from the EPS. Coinoculation with EPS or related oligosaccharide also resulted in formation of nitrogen-fixing nodules on siratro plants. In addition, an Exo- mutant (ANU437) of Rhizobium trifolii ANU794 was able to form nitrogen-fixing nodules on white clover in the presence of added EPS or related oligosaccharide from R. trifolii ANU843. These results demonstrate that the absence of Rhizobium EPSs can result in failure of effective symbiosis with both temperate and subtropical legumes.  相似文献   

16.
The involvement of Rhizobium enzymes that degrade plant cell wall polymers has long been an unresolved question about the infection process in root nodule symbiosis. Here we report the production of enzymes from Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii that degrade carboxymethyl cellulose and polypectate model substrates with sensitive methods that reliably detect the enzyme activities: a double-layer plate assay, quantitation of reducing sugars with a bicinchoninate reagent, and activity gel electrophoresis-isoelectric focusing. Both enzyme activities were (i) produced commonly by diverse wild-type strains, (ii) cell bound with at least some of the activity associated with the cell envelope, and (iii) not changed appreciably by growth in the presence of the model substrates or a flavone that activates expression of nodulation (nod) genes on the resident symbiotic plasmid (pSym). Equivalent levels of carboxymethyl cellulase activity were found in wild-type strain ANU843 and its pSym-cured derivative, ANU845, consistent with previous results of Morales et al. (V. Morales, E. Martínez-Molina, and D. Hubbell, Plant Soil 80:407-415, 1984). However, polygalacturonase activity was lower in ANU845 and was not restored to wild-type levels in the recombinant derivative of pSym- ANU845 containing the common and host-specific nod genes within a 14-kb HindIII DNA fragment of pSym from ANU843 cloned on plasmid pRt032. Activity gel electrophoresis resolved three carboxymethyl cellulase isozymes of approximately 102, 56, and 33 kDa in cell extracts from ANU843. Isoelectric focusing activity gels revealed one ANU843 polygalacturonase isozyme with a pI of approximately 7.2. These studies show that R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii produces multiple enzymes that cleave glycosidic bonds in plant cell walls and that are cell bound.  相似文献   

17.
The involvement of Rhizobium enzymes that degrade plant cell wall polymers has long been an unresolved question about the infection process in root nodule symbiosis. Here we report the production of enzymes from Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii that degrade carboxymethyl cellulose and polypectate model substrates with sensitive methods that reliably detect the enzyme activities: a double-layer plate assay, quantitation of reducing sugars with a bicinchoninate reagent, and activity gel electrophoresis-isoelectric focusing. Both enzyme activities were (i) produced commonly by diverse wild-type strains, (ii) cell bound with at least some of the activity associated with the cell envelope, and (iii) not changed appreciably by growth in the presence of the model substrates or a flavone that activates expression of nodulation (nod) genes on the resident symbiotic plasmid (pSym). Equivalent levels of carboxymethyl cellulase activity were found in wild-type strain ANU843 and its pSym-cured derivative, ANU845, consistent with previous results of Morales et al. (V. Morales, E. Martínez-Molina, and D. Hubbell, Plant Soil 80:407-415, 1984). However, polygalacturonase activity was lower in ANU845 and was not restored to wild-type levels in the recombinant derivative of pSym- ANU845 containing the common and host-specific nod genes within a 14-kb HindIII DNA fragment of pSym from ANU843 cloned on plasmid pRt032. Activity gel electrophoresis resolved three carboxymethyl cellulase isozymes of approximately 102, 56, and 33 kDa in cell extracts from ANU843. Isoelectric focusing activity gels revealed one ANU843 polygalacturonase isozyme with a pI of approximately 7.2. These studies show that R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii produces multiple enzymes that cleave glycosidic bonds in plant cell walls and that are cell bound.  相似文献   

18.
Proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) and fast atom bombardment mass spectrometric analyses were performed on enzymatically derived oligosaccharides from the acidic excreted polysaccharides (EPS) from representative bacterial strains of the pea-nodulating symbiont, Rhizobium leguminosarum (128C53, 128C63, and 300) and the clover-nodulating symbiont, Rhizobium trifolii (NA-30, ANU843, 0403, TA-1, LPR5035, USDA20.102, and 4S). The results revealed structural similarities and differences between EPS of these two species. Octasaccharide units containing galactose, glucuronic acid, alpha-L-threo-hex-4-enopyranosyluronic acid, and glucose in a molar ratio of 1:1:1:5 were obtained from the EPS of the three R. leguminosarum strains and had the same primary glycosyl sequence and location of pyruvate, acetate, and 3-hydroxybutyrate substituents. About 80% of the galactose residues were acylated with 3-hydroxybutyrate, and there were two acetyl groups per repeating unit distributed between the 2 glucose residues of the main chain-derived sequence of the octasaccharides. In contrast, the R. trifolii strains had varied EPS structures, each of which differed from the common R. leguminosarum EPS structure. The EPS from one group of R. trifolii strains (0403 and LPR5035) most closely resembled the R. leguminosarum EPS but differed in that a lower number of galactose and glucose residues were substituted by 3-hydroxybutyryl and acetyl groups, respectively. The EPS from a second group of R. trifolii strains (ANU843, TA-1, and NA-30) was even more different than the R. leguminosarum EPS. These R. trifolii octasaccharides bore a single acetyl group on O-3 of the glucuronic acid residue. In addition, the level of acylation by 3-hydroxybutyryl groups was 50% of that present in the R. leguminosarum EPS. The remaining two strains of R. trifolii (USDA20.102 and 4S) had very different patterns of acylation to each other and to all of the other strains. The EPS from strain USDA20.102 practically lacked 3-hydroxybutyryl groups and had a unique degree and pattern of acetylation. The oligomers from the EPS of R. trifolii strain 4S completely lacked 3-hydroxybutyryl groups and galactose. The latter EPS contained only one O-1-carboxyethylidene group and had a different degree and pattern of acetylation. Interestingly, these two latter strains differ from the other R. trifolii strains in nodulation rates on rare clover species in the Trifolium cross-inoculation group. Thus, we define several groups of R. trifolii based upon their EPS structures and establish their similarities and distinct differences with the EPS of R. leguminosarum.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
This study examined the symbiotic properties of Agrobacterium transconjugants isolated by transferring a Tn5-mob-marked derivative of the 315 kb megaplasmid pRt4Sa from Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii 4S (wild-type strain) to Agrobacterium tumefaciens A136 as the recipient. The genetic characteristics of the AT4S transconjugant strains were ascertained by random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analyses and Southern hybridization using Tn5-mob and nod genes as probes. Several of these AT4S transconjugants carrying pRt4Sa were able to nodulate roots of the normal legume host, white clover. In addition, some AT4S transconjugant strains were able to induce nodules on other leguminous plants, including alfalfa and hairy vetch. A characteristic bacteroid differentiation was observed in clover and alfalfa nodules induced by the AT4S-series strains, although nitrogen-fixing activity (acetylene reduction) was not found. Furthermore, strain H1R1, obtained by retracing transfer of the pRt4Sa::Tn5-mob from strain AT4Sa to strain H1 (pRt4Sa cured derivative of 4S), induced Fix(+) nodules on clover roots. These results indicate the evidence that only nod genes can be expressed in the Agrobacterium background.  相似文献   

20.
The symbiotic plasmid (pSym) of Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii 4S5, which carries Tn5-mob, was successfully transferred into Agrobacterium tumefaciens A136 by using a conjugation method. The resulting transconjugants induced the development of ineffective nitrogen-fixing nodules on the roots of white clover seedlings. Depending on the manner in which the pSym was retained, the transconjugants were divided into two groups of strains, Afp and Afcs. pSym was retained as a plasmid in the Afp strains but was integrated into the int gene encoding a phage-related integrase on the linear chromosome of A. tumefaciens A136 in strain Afcs1 (one of the Afcs strains) to form a symbiosis island. Conjugation was performed between strain Afcs1 and R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii H1 (a pSym-cured derivative of wild-type strain 4S), and the Rhizobium H1tr strains were screened as transconjugants. Eighteen of the H1tr strains induced effective nitrogen-fixing nodules on the roots of the host plants. pSym was transferred into all of the transconjugants, except for strain H1tr1, at the same size as pSym of strain 4S5. In strain H1tr1, pSym was integrated into the chromosome as a symbiosis island. These data suggest that pSym can exist among Rhizobium and Agrobacterium strains both as a plasmid and as a symbiosis island with transposon mediation.  相似文献   

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