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1.
Twenty-six Rhizobium galegae strains, representing the center of origin of the host plants Galega orientalis and G. officinalis as well as other geographic regions, were used in a polyphasic analysis of the relationships of R. galegae strains. Phage typing, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) profiling, pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) profiling and rep-PCR (use of repetitive sequences as PCR primers for genomic fingerprinting) with REP and ERIC primers investigated nonsymbiotic properties, whereas plasmid profiling and hybridisation with a nif gene probe, and with nodB, nodD, nod box and an IS sequence from the symbiotic region as probes, were used to reveal the relationships of symbiotic genes. The results were used in pairwise calculations of distances between the strains, and the distances were visualised as a dendrogram. Indexes of association were compared for all tests pooled, and for chromosomal tests and symbiotic markers separately, to display the input of the different categories of tests on the grouping of the strains. Our study shows that symbiosis related genetic traits in R. galegae divide strains belonging to the species into two groups, which correspond to strains forming an effective symbioses with G. orientalis and G. officinalis respectively. We therefore propose that Rhizobium galegae strains forming an effective symbiosis with Galega orientalis are called R. galegae bv. orientalis and strains forming an effective symbiosis with Galega officinalis are called R. galegae bv. officinalis.  相似文献   

2.
Plasmid profiles of two strains of a newly classified rhizobial species- Rhizobium galegae -were compared with the profiles of several strains of another fast-growing Rhizobium species- Rhizobium meliloti .
The existence of a plasmid DNA band with a lower electrophoretic mobility than the R. meliloti megaplasmid band was demonstrated in the two R. galegae strains by a modified horizontal Eckhardt method. Thus R. galegae species contain giant plasmid(s) larger than the R. meliloti 1000 MD megaplasmids, previously considered to be the largest plasmids in the Rhizobiaceae family.
In one of the R. galegae strains an additional middle-size plasmid only a little smaller than 140 MD pRme41a of R. meliloti 41 was observed.  相似文献   

3.
Expression of Rhizobium galegae common nod clones in various backgrounds.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The cosmid clone pRg30, carrying common nodulation genes of Rhizobium galegae HAMBI 1174, and pRg33, a subclone of pRg30 that contains a 5.7-kb ClaI insert carrying nodDABC were conjugated into various Rhizobium nod- mutant strains and into a Ti plasmid-cured Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Complementation and expression of the nodABC genes of R. galegae were studied by following microscopically the infection process and the nodulation on different test plants. The nodABC genes of R. galegae complemented the nod- strains of other Rhizobium species. The presence of extra copies of common nod genes in the homologous R. galegae nodABC- strain induced an increased nodulation on Galega orientalis. However, the inserts of R. galegae in pRg30 and pRg33 do not carry sufficient genetic information for normal nodulation of test plants in an Agrobacterium background, because the Agrobacterium transconjugants induced root hair deformation on Galega plants, but no infection threads were detected and nodulelike structures developed only at low frequency. The Agrobacterium carrying the nodDABC of R. galegae did not cause the root hairs of Medigo sativa to deform.  相似文献   

4.
Plasmid DNA of six strains of Rhizobium galegae was blotted onto nitrocellulose and hybridized with the 4.8 kb PstI fragment of pRme4lb, a megaplasmid carrying the nifH and the nifD genes of Rhizobium meliloti. DNA sequences homologous to the nif genes were localized on the megaplasmid or on the large plasmid bands of the R. galegae strains tested. In three of the strains analysed the nif genes were located on the megaplasmids. In the other three strains investigated, which also possessed megaplasmids, the nif genes were located on the smaller plasmids.  相似文献   

5.
This paper explores the relationship between the genetic diversity of rhizobia and the morphological diversity of their plant hosts. Rhizobium galegae strains were isolated from nodules of wild Galega orientalis and Galega officinalis in the Caucasus, the center of origin for G. orientalis. All 101 isolates were characterized by genomic amplified fragment length polymorphism fingerprinting and by PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) of the rRNA intergenic spacer and of five parts of the symbiotic region adjacent to nod box sequences. By all criteria, the R. galegae bv. officinalis and R. galegae bv. orientalis strains form distinct clusters. The nod box regions are highly conserved among strains belonging to each of the two biovars but differ structurally to various degrees between the biovars. The findings suggest varying evolutionary pressures in different parts of the symbiotic genome of closely related R. galegae biovars. Sixteen R. galegae bv. orientalis strains harbored copies of the same insertion sequence element; all were isolated from a particular site and belonged to a limited range of chromosomal genotypes. In all analyses, the Caucasian R. galegae bv. orientalis strains were more diverse than R. galegae bv. officinalis strains, in accordance with the gene center theory.  相似文献   

6.
Procedures based on DNA hybridization and PCR were developed for quality control of Rhizobium inoculants. Inoculants for pea and goat's rue were produced by Elomestari Ltd., Juva, Finland, in sterile dry fine peat by the standard procedure used by the company. The inoculants contained Rhizobium galegae HAMBI 1174 and HAMBI 1207 and an R. leguminosarum biovar vicia strain, 16HSA, either solely or in combinations of two or three strains. DNA was isolated from 1-g samples of each peat inoculant and analyzed by nonradioactive DNA-DNA hybridization and by PCR. The hybridization probes were total DNAs from pure cultures of R. galegae HAMBI 1207 and R. leguminosarum biovar viciae 16HSA and a 264-bp strain-specific fragment from the genome of R. galegae HAMBI 1174. The total DNA probes distinguished inoculants containing R. galegae or R. leguminosarum, and the strain-specific probe distinguished inoculants containing R. galegae HAMBI 1174. The hybridization results for R. galegae were verified in a PCR experiment by amplifying an R. galegae species-specific fragment and an R. galegae HAMBI 1174 strain-specific fragment in the same reaction. When suitable probes and primers are available, the methods described here offer promising alternatives for the quality control of peat-based inoculants.  相似文献   

7.
The phylogenetic relatedness among 12 agriculturally important species in the order Rhizobiales was estimated by comparative 16S rRNA and dnaK sequence analyses. Two groups of related species were identified by neighbor-joining and maximum-parsimony analysis. One group consisted of Mesorhizobium loti and Mesorhizobium ciceri, and the other group consisted of Agrobacterium rhizogenes, Rhizobium tropici, Rhizobium etli, and Rhizobium leguminosarum. Although bootstrap support for the placement of the remaining six species varied, A. tumefaciens, Agrobacterium rubi, and Agrobacterium vitis were consistently associated in the same subcluster. The three other species included Rhizobium galegae, Sinorhizobium meliloti, and Brucella ovis. Among these, the placement of R. galegae was the least consistent, in that it was placed flanking the A. rhizogenes-Rhizobium cluster in the dnaK nucleotide sequence trees, while it was placed with the other three Agrobacterium species in the 16S rRNA and the DnaK amino acid trees. In an effort to explain the inconsistent placement of R. galegae, we examined polymorphic site distribution patterns among the various species. Localized runs of nucleotide sequence similarity were evident between R. galegae and certain other species, suggesting that the R. galegae genes are chimeric. These results provide a tenable explanation for the weak statistical support often associated with the phylogenetic placement of R. galegae, and they also illustrate a potential pitfall in the use of partial sequences for species identification.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Competitiveness and genetic variation of the Rhizobium galegae strains from the collection of the All-Russia Institute of Agricultural Microbiology, Russian Academy of Agricultural Sciences, causing nodulation of oriental goat's rue under conditions of Bashkortostan soils (lacking this rhizobial species) were studied. It was demonstrated that of all the tested strains, the strains CIAM 0702 and CIAM 0704, each carrying two megaplasmids of 1500 and 2000 MDa, were the most competitive. RAPD (random amplified polymorphic DNA) analysis showed that R. galegae strains were able to intensively exchange the genetic material in the host plant rhizosphere. We did not succeed in detecting the local root nodule bacteria that were either initially able to infect oriental goat's rue or had adapted to infecting this species due to various genetic rearrangements.  相似文献   

10.
It is known that the Rhizobium galegae genomes contain megaplasmids. The suicide vector pSUP2111 with nifH gene of R. meliloti was introduced into the strains CIAM 0703 and CIAM 0711 of R. galegae inducing effective nodules on Galega orientalis plants. The formation of self-transmissible megaplasmids was observed. The megaplasmid transfer into non-nodulating R. meliloti mutants resulted in partial complementation of the nodulation defect in recipient strains though only one transconjugant showed the nitrogen-fixing activity in symbiosis with alfalfa and another one in symbiosis with G. orientalis plants. Among the Agrobacterium strains harbouring R. galegae megaplasmids there were four classes of transconjugants: (1) Nod+ Fix- in symbiosis with goat's rue plants (three strains); (2) Nod+ Fix- on Medicago sativa (two strains); (3) Nod+ Fix+ on M. sativa (five strains); (4) Nod- with both plant hosts (11 strains).  相似文献   

11.
Competition between effective and ineffective Rhizobium galegae strains nodulating Galega orientalis was examined on the basis of plant growth, nodulation, antibiotic resistance, and PCR results. In a preliminary experiment in Leonard's jars, ineffective R. galegae strains HAMBI 1207 and HAMBI 1209 competed in similar manners with the effective strain R. galegae HAMBI 1174. In a pot experiment, soil was inoculated with 0 to 10(5) HAMBI 1207 cells per g before G. orientalis was sown. Seeds of G. orientalis were surface inoculated with 2 x 10(4) and 2 x 10(5) cells of HAMBI 1174 per seed (which represent half and fivefold the commercially recommended amount of inoculant, respectively). Plant yield and nodulation by the effective strain were significantly reduced, with as few as 10(2) ineffective rhizobia per g of soil, and the inoculation response was not improved by the 10-fold greater dose of the inoculant. Bacteria occupying the nodules were identified by antibiotic resistance and PCR with primers specific for R. galegae HAMBI 1174, R. galegae, and genes coding for bacterial 16S rRNA (bacterial 16S rDNA). Sixty-two large nodules examined were occupied by the effective strain HAMBI 1174, as proven by antibiotic resistance and amplification of the strain-specific fragment. From 20 small nodules, only the species-specific fragment could be amplified, and isolated bacteria had the same antibiotic resistance and 16S PCR restriction pattern as strain HAMBI 1207. PCR with our strain-specific and species-specific primers provides a powerful tool for strain identification of R. galegae directly from nodules without genetic modification of the bacteria.  相似文献   

12.
The phylogenetic relationship among twelve Agrobacterium, four Rhizobium, and two Sinorhizobium strains originating from various host plants and geographical regions was studied by analysis of the 23S rDNA sequences. The study included Agrobacterium strains belonging to biovars 1, 2 (with tumor- or hairy-root inducing and non-pathogenic strains), A. vitis, A. rubi; representative species of the Rhizobium genus: R. galegae, R. leguminosarum and R. tropici and Sinorhizobium meliloti strains. The phylogenetic analysis showed that within Agrobacterium, the biovar designation was reflected in the 23S rDNA similarity and that strains of Agrobacterium and Rhizobium are closely related to each other. The results suggest that the taxonomic definition of Agrobacterium and Rhizobium should be considered for revision and that the Agrobacterium-biovar identity is probably a reliable taxonomic trait.  相似文献   

13.
An insertion sequence (IS) element, ISR12, from Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae strain MSDJ4184 was isolated by insertional inactivation of the sacRB gene of pSUP104-sac, which allows positive selection. ISRl2 is 932 bp long, is flanked by 17-bp imperfect terminal inverted repeats, and generated a 3-bp target site duplication. ISRl2 was found to be 63 to 77% homologous to insertion elements of the IS5 group of the IS4 superfamily. A probe incorporating a full-length copy of ISRl2 was used to screen genomic DNAs from a collection of strains and from two field populations of R. leguminosarum to detect and estimate the copy numbers of homologous sequences. Among the collection of 63 strains representing the different species and genera of members of the family Rhizobiaceae, homology to ISRl2 was found within strains belonging to Sinorhizobium meliloti and S. fredii; within four of the six recognized Rhizobium species. R. leguminosarum, R. tropici, R. etli, and R. galegae; and within Rhizobium sp. (Phaseolus) genomic species 2. The apparent copy numbers of ISRl2 varied from one to eight. Among 139 isolates of R. leguminosarum from two field populations, homology to ISRl2 was detected in 91% of the isolates from one site and in 17% from the other. Analysis of the 95 isolates that hybridize to ISRl2 revealed a total of 20 distinct hybridization patterns composed of one to three bands. Probing blots of Eckhardt gels showed that sequences with homology to ISRl2 may be found on plasmids or the chromosome. Analysis of their genomic distribution demonstrated relationships and diversity among the R. leguminosarum isolates tested.  相似文献   

14.
Strain-specific genomic patterns of Rhizobium galegae were generated by PCR using both arbitrary and repetitive (BOX, ERIC and REP) primers. The identification of the strains was achieved also by RFLP analysis. However, the PCR genomic fingerprinting has significant advantages: it is not only simpler and faster, but it is also much more discriminative because it deals with the full bacterial genome and not only with parts of it as is the case with RFLP. In addition, both kinds of PCR fingerprinting (using arbitrary or repetitive primers) generated highly specific and reproducible patterns when parallel reactions with total bacterial DNA, extracted from independent liquid cultures were performed. The latter shows that AP- and rep-PCR are convenient for controlling the production and application of Rhizobium inoculants.  相似文献   

15.
I. HUBER AND S. SELENSKA-POBELL. 1994. The genomes of several Rhizobium galegae (of.) strains, which effectively nodulate Galega officinalis host, were analysed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Individual PFGE-fingerprints were obtained for every particular strain when the rarely cutting restriction endonucleases Spe I and Asn I were applied. In hybridization experiments, where a DNA fragment carrying the rrnB ribosomal RNA operon of Escherichia coli was used as a probe, the number of the resulting strain-specific Spe I and Asn I bands was reduced to three for all of the strains studied. This suggests that in Rh. galegae (of.) there are at least three rrn loci. On the basis of the lengths of the Spe I fragments, separated by PFGE, the genome size of five Rh. galegae (of.) strains was estimated to be 5852 ± 198 kbp.  相似文献   

16.
A total of 159 endophytic bacteria were isolated from surface-sterilized root nodules of wild perennial Glycyrrhiza legumes growing on 40 sites in central and northwestern China. Amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) genomic fingerprinting and sequencing of partial 16S rRNA genes revealed that the collection mainly consisted of Mesorhizobium, Rhizobium, Sinorhizobium, Agrobacterium and Paenibacillus species. Based on symbiotic properties with the legume hosts Glycyrrhiza uralensis and Glycyrrhiza glabra, we divided the nodulating species into true and sporadic symbionts. Five distinct Mesorhizobium groups represented true symbionts of the host plants, the majority of strains inducing N2-fixing nodules. Sporadic symbionts consisted of either species with infrequent occurrence (Rhizobium galegae, Rhizobium leguminosarum) or species with weak (Sinorhizobium meliloti, Rhizobium gallicum) or no N2 fixation ability (Rhizobium giardinii, Rhizobium cellulosilyticum, Phyllobacterium sp.). Multivariate analyses revealed that the host plant species and geographic location explained only a small part (14.4%) of the total variation in bacterial AFLP patterns, with the host plant explaining slightly more (9.9%) than geography (6.9%). However, strains isolated from G. glabra were clearly separated from those from G. uralensis, and strains obtained from central China were well separated from those originating from Xinjiang in the northwest, indicating both host preference and regional endemism.  相似文献   

17.
The role of glycine betaine and choline in osmoprotection of various Rhizobium, Sinorhizobium, Mesorhizobium, Agrobacterium, and Bradyrhizobium reference strains which display a large variation in salt tolerance was investigated. When externally provided, both compounds enhanced the growth of Rhizobium tropici, Sinorhizobium meliloti, Sinorhizobium fredii, Rhizobium galegae, Agrobacterium tumefaciens, Mesorhizobium loti, and Mesorhizobium huakuii, demonstrating their utilization as osmoprotectants. However, both compounds were inefficient for the most salt-sensitive strains, such as Rhizobium leguminosarum (all biovars), Agrobacterium rhizogenes, Rhizobium etli, and Bradyrhizobium japonicum. Except for B. japonicum, all strains exhibit transport activity for glycine betaine and choline. When the medium osmolarity was raised, choline uptake activity was inhibited, whereas glycine betaine uptake was either increased in R. leguminosarum and S. meliloti or, more surprisingly, reduced in R. tropici, S. fredii, and M. loti. The transport of glycine betaine was increased by growing the cells in the presence of the substrate. With the exception of B. japonicum, all strains were able to use glycine betaine and choline as sole carbon and nitrogen sources. This catabolic function, reported for only a few soil bacteria, could increase competitiveness of rhizobial species in the rhizosphere. Choline dehydrogenase and betaine-aldehyde dehydrogenase activities were present in the cells of all strains with the exception of M. huakuii and B. japonicum. The main physiological role of glycine betaine in the family Rhizobiaceae seems to be as an energy source, while its contribution to osmoprotection is restricted to certain strains.  相似文献   

18.
Heterogeneity of Rhizobium lipopolysaccharides.   总被引:5,自引:18,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
The lipopolysaccharides ( LPSs ) from strains of Rhizobium leguminosarum, Rhizobium trifolii, and Rhizobium phaseoli were isolated and partially characterized by mild acid hydrolysis and by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Mild acid hydrolysis results in a precipitate which can be removed by centrifugation or extraction with chloroform. The supernatant contains polysaccharides which, in general, are separated into two fractions ( LPS1 and LPS2 ) by Sephadex G-50 gel filtration chromatography. The higher-molecular-weight LPS1 fractions among the various Rhizobium strains are highly variable in composition and reflect the variability reported in the intact LPSs (R. W. Carlson and R. Lee, Plant Physiol. 71:223-228, 1983; Carlson et al., Plant Physiol. 62:912-917, 1978; Zevenhuizen et al., Arch. Microbiol. 125:1-8, 1980). The LPS1 fraction of R. leguminosarum 128C53 has a higher molecular weight than all other LPS1 fractions examined. All LPS2 fractions examined are oligosaccharides with a molecular weight of ca. 600. The major sugar component of all LPS2 oligosaccharides is uronic acid. The LPS2 compositions are similar for strains of R. leguminosarum and R. trifolii, but the LPS2 from R. phaseoli was different in that it contained glucose, a sugar not found in the other LPS2 fractions or found only in trace amounts. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic analysis shows that each LPS contains two banding regions, a higher-molecular-weight heterogeneous region often containing many bands and a lower-molecular-weight band. The lower-molecular-weight bands of all LPSs have the same electrophoretic mobility, which is greater than that of lysozyme. The banding pattern of the heterogeneous regions varies among the different Rhizobium strains. In the case of R. leguminosarum 128C53 LPS, the heterogeneous region of a higher molecular weight than is this region from all other Rhizobium strains examined and consists of many bands separated from one another by a small and apparently constant molecular weight interval. When the heterogeneous region of R. Leguminosarum 128C53 LPS was cut from the gel and analyzed, its composition was found to be that of the intact LPS, whereas the lower-molecular-weight band contains only sugars found in the LPS2 oligosaccharide. In the case of R. leguminosarum 128C63 and R. trifolii 0403 LPSs, the heterogeneous regions are similar and consist of several band s separated by a large-molecular-weight interval with a the major band of these heterogeneous regions having the lowest molecular weight with an electrophoretic mobility near that of beta-lactoglobulin. The heterogeneous region from R. phaseoli 127K14 consists of several bands with electrophoretic mobilities near that of beta-lactoglobulin, whereas this region from R. trifolii 162S7 shows a continuous staining region, indicating a great deal of heterogeneity. The results described in this paper are discussed with regard to the reported properties of Escherichia coli and Salmonella LPSs.  相似文献   

19.
To investigate the in situ expression of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) epitopes on nodule bacteria of Rhizobium leguminosarum, monoclonal antibodies recognizing LPS macromolecules were used for immunocytochemical staining of pea nodule tissue. Many LPS epitopes were constitutively expressed, and the corresponding antibodies reacted in nodule sections with bacteria at all stages of tissue infection and cell invasion. Some antibodies, however, recognized epitopes that were only expressed in particular regions of the nodule. Two general patterns of regulated LPS epitope expression could be distinguished on longitudinal sections of nodules. A radial pattern probably reflected the local physiological conditions experienced by endosymbiotic bacteria as a result of oxygen diffusion into the nodule tissue. The other pattern of expression, which followed a linear axis of symmetry along a longitudinal section of the pea nodule, was apparently associated with the differentiation of nodule bacteria and the development of the nitrogen-fixing capacity in bacteroids. Basically similar patterns of LPS epitope expression were observed for pea nodules harboring either of two immunologically distinct strains of R. leguminosarum bv. viciae, although these epitopes were recognized by different sets of strain-specific monoclonal antibodies. Furthermore, LPS epitope expression of rhizobia in pea nodules was compared with that of equivalent strains in nodules of French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris). From these observations, it is suggested that structural modifications of Rhizobium LPS may play an important role in the adaptation of endosymbiotic rhizobia to the surrounding microenvironment.  相似文献   

20.
A well-resolved rhizobial species phylogeny with 51 haplotypes was inferred from a combined atpD + recA data set using Bayesian inference with best-fit, gene-specific substitution models. Relatively dense taxon sampling for the genera Rhizobium and Mesorhizobium was achieved by generating atpD and recA sequences for six type and 24 reference strains not previously available in GenBank. This phylogeny was used to classify nine nodule isolates from Sesbania exasperata, S. punicea and S. sericea plants native to seasonally flooded areas of Venezuela, and compared with a PCR-RFLP analysis of rrs plus rrl genes and large maximum likelihood rrs and nifH phylogenies. We show that rrs phylogenies are particularly sensitive to strain choice due to the high levels of sequence mosaicism found at this locus. All analyses consistently identified the Sesbania isolates as Mesorhizobium plurifarium or Rhizobium huautlense. Host range experiments on ten legume species coupled with plasmid profiling uncovered potential novel biovarieties of both species. This study demonstrates the wide geographic and environmental distribution of M. plurifarium, that R. galegae and R. huautlense are sister lineages, and the synonymy of R. gallicum, R. mongolense and R. yanglingense. Complex and diverse phylogeographic, inheritance and host-association patterns were found for the symbiotic nifH locus. The results and the analytical approaches used herein are discussed in the context of rhizobial taxonomy and molecular systematics.  相似文献   

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