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1.
When Rhizobium etli CE3 was grown in the presence of Phaseolus vulgaris seed extracts containing anthocyanins, its lipopolysaccharide (LPS) sugar composition was changed in two ways: greatly decreased content of what is normally the terminal residue of the LPS, di-O-methylfucose, and a doubling of the 2-O-methylation of other fucose residues in the LPS O antigen. R. etli strain CE395 was isolated after Tn5 mutagenesis of strain CE3 by screening for mutant colonies that did not change antigenically in the presence of seed extract. The LPS of this strain completely lacked 2-O-methylfucose, regardless of whether anthocyanins were present during growth. The mutant gave only pseudonodules in association with P. vulgaris. Interpretation of this phenotype was complicated by a second LPS defect exhibited by the mutant: its LPS population had only about 50% of the normal amount of O-antigen-containing LPS (LPS I). The latter defect could be suppressed genetically such that the resulting strain (CE395 alpha 395) synthesized the normal amount of an LPS I that still lacked 2-O-methylfucose residues. Strain CE395 alpha 395 did not elicit pseudonodules but resulted in significantly slower nodule development, fewer nodules, and less nitrogenase activity than lps(+) strains. The relative symbiotic deficiency was more severe when seeds were planted and inoculated with bacteria before they germinated. These results support previous conclusions that the relative amount of LPS I on the bacterial surface is crucial in symbiosis, but LPS structural features, such as 2-O-methylation of fucose, also may facilitate symbiotic interactions.  相似文献   

2.
Judged by migration of its lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in gel electrophoresis, the O antigen of Rhizobium etli mutant strain CE166 was apparently of normal size. However, its LPS sugar composition and staining of the LPS bands after electrophoresis indicated that the proportion of its LPS molecules that possessed O antigen was only 40% of the wild-type value. Its LPS also differed from the wild type by lacking quinovosamine (2-amino-2,6-dideoxyglucose). Both of these defects were due to a single genetic locus carrying a Tn5 insertion. The deficiency in O-antigen amount, but not the absence of quinovosamine, was suppressed by transferring into this strain recombinant plasmids that shared a 7.8-kb stretch of the R. etli CE3 lps genetic region alpha, even though this suppressing DNA did not carry the genetic region mutated in strain CE166. Strain CE166 gave rise to pseudonodules on legume host Phaseolus vulgaris, whereas the mutant suppressed by DNA from lps region alpha elicited nitrogen-fixing nodules. However, the nodules in the latter case developed slowly and were widely dispersed. Two other R. etli mutants that had one-half or less of the normal amount of O antigen also gave rise to pseudonodules on P. vulgaris. The latter strains were mutated in lps region alpha and could be restored to normal LPS content and normal symbiosis by complementation with wild-type DNA from this region. Hence, the symbiotic role of LPS requires near-normal abundance of O antigen and may require a structural feature conferred by quinovosamine.  相似文献   

3.
Monoclonal antibodies that react with Rhizobium leguminosarum lipopolysaccharide core antigens (LPS-2) have been used to investigate LPS-2 structure in Rhizobium etli. The panel of antibodies (JIM 32 - JIM 35, JIM 37, JIM 38) specific for LPS-2 of R. leguminosarum strain 3841 and its core components displays similar reactivities towards isolated LPS-2 from R. etli CE109 (a mutant of wild-type strain R. etli CE3 that displays LPS-2 as its main LPS form on the cell surface). This result suggests the antibodies bind to similar epitopes on both strains and, hence, that R. leguminosarum and R. etli have very similar LPS core and lipid A antigen structures. More detailed analysis of the antibody binding sites with isolated LPS-2 and lipid A from R. etli suggests that some of the antibodies (JIM 32, 33, 34, and MASM-I) bind some part of the core oligosaccharides, while others (JIM 35 and JIM 38) involve lipid A. These antibodies have already proven useful in the biochemical analysis of the LPS antigen forms. For example, the loss of reactivity of certain LPS forms with antibody JIM 37 has led to the discovery of a hitherto unnoticed form of the LPS antigen in a precipitate formed during the phenol/water extraction procedure. This new form reacts with the JIM 37 antibody. Furthermore, the positive reaction of some of the antibodies with only sonicated wild-type R. etli cells suggests that either an effective way of masking the display of core antigens on whole bacterial cells is occurring or that core forms of the LPSs are never displayed on the surface of the bacterial cells. Either possibility, once confirmed, could be important for our picture of the Rhizobium cell surface and could also have some bearing on symbiotic nodule infection and development.Abbreviations LPS lipopolysaccharide  相似文献   

4.
The lipid A component of lipopolysaccharide from the nitrogen-fixing plant endosymbiont, Rhizobium etli, is structurally very different from that found in most enteric bacteria. The lipid A from free-living R. etli is structurally heterogeneous and exists as a mixture of species which are either pentaacylated or tetraacylated. In contrast, the lipid A from R. etli bacteroids is reported to consist exclusively of tetraacylated lipid A species. The tetraacylated lipid A species in both cases lack a β-hydroxymyristoyl chain at the 3-position of lipid A. Here, we show that the lipid A modification enzyme responsible for 3-O deacylation in R. etli is a homolog of the PagL protein originally described in Salmonella enterica sv. typhimurium. In contrast to the PagL proteins described from other species, R. etli PagL displays a calcium dependency. To determine the importance of the lipid A modification catalyzed by PagL, we isolated and characterized a R. etli mutant deficient in the pagL gene. Mass spectrometric analysis confirmed that the mutant strain was exclusively tetraacylated and radiochemical analysis revealed that 3-O deacylase activity was absent in membranes prepared from the mutant. The R. etli mutant was not impaired in its ability to form nitrogen-fixing nodules on Phaseolus vulgaris but it displayed slower nodulation kinetics relative to the wild-type strain. The lipid A modification catalyzed by R. etli PagL, therefore, is not required for nodulation but may play other roles such as protecting bacterial endosymbionts from plant immune responses during infection.  相似文献   

5.
The Rhizobium etli CE3 O antigen is a fixed-length heteropolymer with O methylation being the predominant type of sugar modification. There are two O-methylated residues that occur, on average, once per complete O antigen: a multiply O-methylated terminal fucose and 2-O methylation of a fucose residue within a repeating unit. The amount of the methylated terminal fucose decreases and the amount of 2-O-methylfucose increases when bacteria are grown in the presence of the host plant, Phaseolus vulgaris, or its seed exudates. Insertion mutagenesis was used to identify open reading frames required for the presence of these O-methylated residues. The presence of the methylated terminal fucose required genes wreA, wreB, wreC, wreD, and wreF, whereas 2-O methylation of internal fucoses required the methyltransferase domain of bifunctional gene wreM. Mutants lacking only the methylated terminal fucose, lacking only 2-O methylation, or lacking both the methylated terminal fucose and 2-O methylation exhibited no other lipopolysaccharide structural defects. Thus, neither of these decorations is required for normal O-antigen length, transport, or assembly into the final lipopolysaccharide. This is in contrast to certain enteric bacteria in which the absence of a terminal decoration severely affects O-antigen length and transport. R. etli mutants lacking only the methylated terminal fucose were not altered in symbiosis with host Phaseolus vulgaris, whereas mutants lacking only 2-O-methylfucose exhibited a delay in nodule development during symbiosis. These results support previous conclusions that the methylated terminal fucose is dispensable for symbiosis, whereas 2-O methylation of internal fucoses somehow facilitates early events in symbiosis.O antigens typically constitute the distal portions of lipopolysaccharides (LPS) and help determine the diverse surface characteristics of Gram-negative bacteria. These repeat unit carbohydrate polymers vary tremendously in structure and, as a family, they exhibit all known sugars and sugar modifications, linked in myriad ways forming homopolymers and heteropolymers. Control of polymer length also varies, allowing highly uniform to completely random lengths. Great diversity of O-antigen structures even within a species is well known. Moreover, O antigens of a single strain can vary according to growth and environmental conditions. One such condition is the presence of a multicellular host (5, 18, 36, 40, 42, 44).Rhizobium etli CE3 fixes nitrogen inside root nodules it incites on the common bean Phaseolus vulgaris. The O antigen of its LPS (Fig. (Fig.1)1) is essential for bacterial infection during development of this symbiosis (41). In addition, at least two alterations occur in the O antigen when R. etli CE3 is grown in the presence of either the host plant or plant exudates. The content of the multiply O-methylated terminal fucose is decreased (19, 44), whereas the 2-O methylation of internal fucoses (2OMeFuc) increases twofold (Fig. (Fig.1)1) (15, 44). In addition to the multiply O-methylated terminal fucose and 2OMeFuc, methylation occurs always on 6-deoxytalose and likely on glucuronic acid to yield 3-O-methyl-6-deoxytalose (3OMe6dTal) and methyl-esterified glucuronyl (MeGlcA) residues (Fig. (Fig.1)1) (22); however, the incidence of these methylations is not known to vary with growth condition. The genetics responsible for the variable O methylations and the additions of the residues they modify have not been elucidated.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.R. etli CE3 O-antigen structure (22). The portion of the LPS conceptually defined as O antigen begins with N-acetyl-quinovosamine (QuiNAc) at the reducing end followed by a mannose (Man) residue and a fucose (Fuc) residue. Attached to this fucose is the repeating unit consisting of one fucose residue, one 3-O-methyl-6-deoxytalose residue (3OMe6dTal), and one glucuronyl methyl ester residue (MeGlcA). The sugars of the repeating unit are added sequentially exactly five times (in most molecules). An O-acetyl group is present in each of the repeating units, but its location is unknown at this time. Growth in TY culture results in one 2-O-methylfucose (2OMeFuc) per O antigen on average (22). The O-antigen backbone is capped with a 2,3-di-O-methylfucose (referred to as the terminal residue in this report) on which additional O methylation at the 4-position is variable as indicated by parentheses. Growth of the bacteria in the presence of the host plant or plant exudates induces the increase of 2-O methylation of internal fucose (2OMeFuc) residues and decreased relative amount of the terminal residue (44).Most mutations affecting the known R. etli CE3 O-antigen structure map to a 28-kb genetic cluster on the chromosome (Fig. (Fig.2)2) (previously referred to as lps region α [8, 19, 37, 40, 45]). Genes and mutations within this cluster previously have been given the designations lps (9) and lpe (19). Recently, the new designation wre has been sanctioned by the Bacterial Polysaccharide Gene Database for this genetic cluster and other genes specifically devoted to the R. etli CE3 O antigen, in keeping with the system of nomenclature for bacterial polysaccharide genes (47).Open in a separate windowFIG. 2.R. etli CE3 O-antigen genetic cluster. (A) The R. etli CE3 chromosomal O antigen genetic cluster spans nucleotides 784527 to 812262 of the genome sequence (28) and consists of 25 putative ORFs. ORFs relevant to the present study are enlarged, and the relative locations of mutations are indicated. White triangles indicate mutations created by insertion of antibiotic cassettes, and black triangles indicate mutations created by Tn5 mutagenesis. The strain numbers carrying these mutations are indicated above the triangles. (B) The solid bars represent the extents of R. etli CE3 DNA cloned for complementation analysis. The scale and positions match those of the lower map in panel A.Duelli et al. (19) identified a 3-kb genetic locus that is required for the presence of the 2,3-di-O-methylfucose or 2,3,4-tri-O-methylfucose at the terminus of the O antigen. Now known to be near one end of the O-antigen genetic cluster (Fig. (Fig.2),2), the DNA sequence reported by Duelli et al. encompasses nucleotides 807701 to 810147 of the subsequently determined genome sequence (28). Sequence and annotation of the 3-kb locus have since been revised. In place of the four open reading frames (ORFs) suggested previously (19), the current annotation predicts two ORFs: wreA and wreC (Fig. (Fig.2).2). The wreA ORF is predicted to encode a methyltransferase (19), but the predicted WreC polypeptide sequence matches no known methyltransferase or glycosyltransferase or any other polypeptide sequence in the database (Fig. (Fig.3).3). When it became clear that this locus was part of the larger O-antigen genetic cluster, the nucleotide sequence suggested that three genes contiguous to wreA also might encode functions needed for synthesis and addition of the terminal fucose. The results to be shown bore out predictions of this hypothesis.Open in a separate windowFIG. 3.Conserved domain predictions. Spanning nucleotides 804817 to 810147 of the genome sequence (28), ORFs RHE_CH00766, RHE_CH00767, RHE_CH00768, RHE_CH00769, and RHE_CH00770 were named wreB, wreD, wreF, wreA, and wreC, respectively. Previously, wreF, wreA, and wreC were referred to as nlpe2, lpeA, and nlpe1, respectively (19). ORF RHE_CH00755, spanning nucleotides 791286 to 794093, was named wreM. Predicted positions of conserved domains are indicated by amino acid positions. Abbreviations: GT, conserved glycosyltransferase domain; MT, conserved methyltransferase domain. Gray boxes indicate the predicted transmembrane domains.The gene responsible for the other conditionally variable O-antigen methylation, the 2-O methylation of internal fucose residues (2OMeFuc), had not been identified in prior published work. However, among mutants isolated by random Tn5 mutagenesis, a few had been shown to lack 2OMeFuc entirely (44). We show here that the transposon insertions were located in the bifunctional gene wreM. Furthermore, results of directed insertion mutagenesis confirm two separate enzymatic domains encoded by this gene, with the α domain being required for the 2-O methylation activity and mutation of the other domain resulting in a truncated O antigen. Mutants from the directed mutagenesis that appeared to have no LPS defects other than the lack of 2OMeFuc served as tools to assess the importance of just this structural feature in the symbiosis with P. vulgaris.  相似文献   

6.
The photosynthetic bradyrhizobia are able to use a Nod-factor independent process to induce nitrogen-fixing nodules on some semi-aquatic Aeschynomene species. These bacteria display a unique LPS O-antigen composed of a new sugar, the bradyrhizose that is regarded as a key symbiotic factor due to its non-immunogenic character. In this study, to check this hypothesis, we isolated mutants affected in the O-antigen synthesis by screening a transposon mutant library of the ORS285 strain for clones altered in colony morphology. Over the 10,000 mutants screened, five were selected and found to be mutated in two genes, rfaL, encoding for a putative O-antigen ligase and gdh encoding for a putative dTDP-glucose 4,6-dehydratase. Biochemical analysis confirmed that the LPS of these mutants completely lack the O-antigen region. However, no effect of the mutations could be detected on the symbiotic properties of the mutants indicating that the O-antigen region of photosynthetic Bradyrhizobium strains is not required for the establishment of symbiosis with Aeschynomene.  相似文献   

7.
K. Niehaus  D. Kapp  A. Pühler 《Planta》1993,190(3):415-425
Mutants of the symbiotic soil bacterium Rhizobium meliloti that fail to synthesize the acidic exopolysaccharide EPS I were unable to induce infected root nodules on Medicago sativa L. (alfalfa). These strains, however, elicited pseudonodules that contained no infection threads or bacteroids. The cortical cell walls of the pseudonodules were abnormally thick and incrusted with an autofluorescent material. Parts of these cell walls and wall appositions contained callose. Biochemical analysis of nodules induced by the EPS I-deficient R. meliloti mutant revealed an increase of phenolic compounds bound to the nodule cell walls when compared with the wild-type strain. These microscopic and biochemical data indicated that a general plant defence response against the EPS I-deficient mutant of R. meliloti was induced in alfalfa pseudonodules. Following prolonged incubation with the EPS I-deficient R. meliloti mutant, the defence system of the alfalfa plant could be overcome by the rhizobium mutant. In the case of the delayed infections, the mutants colonized lobes of the pseudonodules, but the infection threads in these nodules had an abnormal morphology. They were greatly enlarged and did not contain the typical gum-like matrix inside. The bacteria were tightly packed. Based on the mechanism of phytopathogenic interactions, we propose that EPS I or a related compound may act as a suppressor of the alfalfa plant defence system, enabling R. meliloti to infect the plant.  相似文献   

8.
A Rhizobium etli Tn5mob-induced mutant (CFN035) exhibits an enhanced capacity to oxidize N,N,N′,N′, tetramethyl-p -phenylenediamine (TMPD), a presumptive indicator of elevated cytochrome c terminal oxidase activity. Sequencing of the mutated gene in CFN035 revealed that it codes for the amidophosphoribosyl transferase enzyme (PurF) that catalyzes the first step in the purine biosynthetic pathway. Two c-type cytochromes with molecular weights of 32 and 27?kDa were produced in strain CFN035, which also produced a novel CO-reactive cytochrome (absorbance trough at 553?nm), in contrast to strain CE3 which produced a single 32?kDa c-type protein and did not produce the 553?nm CO-reactive cytochrome. A wild-type R. etli strain that expresses the Bradyrhizobium japonicum fixNOQP genes, which code for the symbiotic cytochrome terminal oxidase cbb 3, produced similar absorbance spectra (a trough at 553?nm in CO-difference spectra) and two c -type proteins similar in size to those of strain CFN035, suggesting that CFN035 also produces the cbb 3 terminal oxidase. The expression of a R. etli fixN-lacZ gene fusion was measured in several R. etli mutants affected in different steps of the purine biosynthetic pathway. Our analysis showed that purF, purD, purQ, purL, purY, purK and purE mutants expressed three-fold higher levels of the fixNOQP operon than the wild-type strain. The derepressed expression of fixN was not observed in a purH mutant. The purH gene product catalyzes the conversion of 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleotide (AICAR) to 5-formaminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleotide (FAICAR) and inosine. Supplementation with AICA riboside lowered the levels of fixN expression in the purF mutants. These data are consistent with the possibility that AICAR, or a closely related metabolite, is a negative effector of the production of the symbiotic terminal oxidase cbb 3 in R. etli.  相似文献   

9.
A collection of rhizobial isolates from nodules of wild beans, Phaseolus vulgaris var. aborigineus, found growing in virgin lands in 17 geographically separate sites in northwest Argentina was characterized on the basis of host range, growth, hybridization to a nifH probe, analysis of genes coding for 16S rRNA (16S rDNA), DNA fingerprinting, and plasmid profiles. Nodules in field-collected wild bean plants were largely dominated by rhizobia carrying the 16S rDNA allele of Rhizobium etli. A similar prevalence of the R. etli allele was observed among rhizobia trapped from nearby soil. Intragroup diversity of wild bean isolates with either R. etli-like or Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. phaseoli-like alleles was generally found across northwest Argentina. The predominance of the R. etli allele suggests that in this center of origin of P. vulgaris the coevolution of Rhizobium spp. and primitive beans has resulted in this preferential symbiotic association.  相似文献   

10.
Rhizobium etli, as well as some other rhizobia, presents nitrogenase reductase (nifH) gene reiterations. Several R. etli strains studied in this laboratory showed a unique organization and contained two complete nifHDK operons (copies a and b) and a truncated nifHD operon (copy c). Expression analysis of lacZ fusion demonstrated that copies a and b in strain CFN42 are transcribed at lower levels than copy c, although this copy has no discernible role during nitrogen fixation. To increase nitrogenase production, we constructed a chimeric nifHDK operon regulated by the strong nifHc promoter sequence and expressed it in symbiosis with the common bean plant (Phaseolus vulgaris), either cloned on a stably inherited plasmid or incorporated into the symbiotic plasmid (pSym). Compared with the wild-type strain, strains with the nitrogenase overexpression construction assayed in greenhouse experiments had, increased nitrogenase activity (58% on average), increased plant weight (32% on average), increased nitrogen content in plants (15% at 32 days postinoculation), and most importantly, higher seed yield (36% on average), higher nitrogen content (25%), and higher nitrogen yield (72% on average) in seeds. Additionally, expression of the chimeric nifHDK operon in a poly-β-hydroxybutyrate-negative R. etli strain produced an additive effect in enhancing symbiosis. To our knowledge, this is the first report of increased seed yield and nutritional content in the common bean obtained by using only the genetic material already present in Rhizobium.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Recent studies have shown that living and heat-killed cells of the rhizobacterium Rhizobium etli strain G12 induce in potato roots systemic resistance to infection by the potato cyst nematode Globodera pallida. To better understand the mechanisms of induced resistance, we focused on identifying the inducing agent. Since heat-stable bacterial surface carbohydrates such as exopolysaccharides (EPS) and lipopolysaccharides (LPS) are essential for recognition in the symbiotic interaction between Rhizobium and legumes, their role in the R. etli-potato interaction was studied. EPS and LPS were extracted from bacterial cultures, applied to potato roots, and tested for activity as an inducer of plant resistance to the plant-parasitic nematode. Whereas EPS did not affect G. pallida infection, LPS reduced nematode infection significantly in concentrations as low as 1 and 0.1 mg ml−1. Split-root experiments, guaranteeing a spatial separation of inducing agent and challenging pathogen, showed that soil treatments of one half of the root system with LPS resulted in a highly significant (up to 37%) systemic induced reduction of G. pallida infection of potato roots in the other half. The results clearly showed that LPS of R. etli G12 act as the inducing agent of systemic resistance in potato roots.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Following (iso)flavonoid induction, nodulation genes of the symbiotic nitrogen-fixing bacterium Rhizobium sp. strain NGR234 elaborate a large family of lipooligosaccharidic Nod factors (NodNGR factors). When secreted into the rhizosphere of compatible legumes, these signal molecules initiate root hair deformation and nodule development. The nonreducing glucosamine residue of NodNGR factors are N acylated, N methylated, and mono- or biscarbamoylated, while position C-6 of the reducing extremity is fucosylated. This fucose residue is normally 2-O methylated and either sulfated or acetylated. Here we present an analysis of all acetylated NodNGR factors, which clearly shows that the acetate group may occupy position C-3 or C-4 of the fucose moiety. Disruption of the flavonoid-inducible nolL gene, which is preceded by a nod box, results in the synthesis of NodNGR factors that lack the 3-O- or 4-O-acetate groups. Interestingly, the nodulation capacity of the mutant NGRΩnolL is not impaired, whereas introduction of the nod box::nolL construct into the related strain Rhizobium fredii USDA257 extends the host range of this bacterium to Calopogonium caeruleum, Leucaena leucocephala, and Lotus halophilus. Nod factors produced by a USDA257(pnolL) transconjugant were also acetylated. The nod box::nolL construct was also introduced into ANU265 (NGR234 cured of its symbiotic plasmid), along with extra copies of the nodD1 gene. When permeabilized, these cells possessed acetyltransferase activity, although crude extracts did not.  相似文献   

15.
Rhizobium leguminosarum is a Gram-negative bacterium that forms nitrogen-fixing symbioses with compatible leguminous plants via intracellular invasion and establishes a persistent infection within host membrane-derived subcellular compartments. Notably, an unusual very-long-chain fatty acid (VLCFA) is found in the lipid A of R. leguminosarum as well as in the lipid A of the medically relevant pathogens Brucella abortus, Brucella melitensis, Bartonella henselae, and Legionella pneumophila, which are also able to persist within intracellular host-derived membranes. These bacterial symbionts and pathogens each contain a homologous gene region necessary for the synthesis and transfer of the VLCFA to the lipid A. Within this region lies a gene that encodes the specialized acyl carrier protein AcpXL, on which the VLCFA is built. This study describes the biochemical and infection phenotypes of an acpXL mutant which lacks the VLCFA. The mutation was created in R. leguminosarum bv. phaseoli strain 8002, which forms symbiosis with Phaseolus vulgaris, a determinate nodulating legume. Structural analysis using gas chromatography and mass spectrometry revealed that the mutant lipid A lacked the VLCFA. Compared to the parent strain, the mutant was more sensitive to the detergents deoxycholate and dodecyl sulfate and the antimicrobial peptide polymyxin B, suggesting a compromise to membrane stability. In addition, the mutant was more sensitive to higher salt concentrations. Passage through the plant restored salt tolerance. Electron microscopic examination showed that the mutant was developmentally delayed during symbiotic infection of the host plant Phaseolus vulgaris and produced abnormal symbiosome structures.  相似文献   

16.
Plant host-derived proline is proposed to serve as an energy source for rhizobia in the rhizosphere and in symbiotic root nodules. The Bradyrhizobium japonicum proC gene was isolated, and a proC mutant strain that behaved as a strict proline auxotroph in culture was constructed. The proC strain elicited undeveloped nodules on soybeans that lacked nitrogen fixation activity and plant hemoglobin. We conclude that the proC gene is essential for symbiosis and suggest that the mutant does not obtain an exogenous supply of proline in association with soybeans sufficient to satisfy its auxotrophy.  相似文献   

17.
A collection of 160 isolates of rhizobia nodulating Phaseolus vulgaris in three geographical regions in Tunisia was characterized by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-amplified 16S rDNA, nifH and nodC genes. Nine groups of rhizobia were delineated: Rhizobium gallicum biovar (bv.) gallicum, Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. phaseoli and bv. viciae, Rhizobium etli bv. phaseoli, Rhizobium giardinii bv. giardinii, and four groups related to species of the genus Sinorhizobium, Sinorhizobium meliloti, Sinorhizobium medicae and Sinorhizobium fredii. The most abundant rhizobial species were R. gallicum, R. etli, and R. leguminosarum encompassing 29–20% of the isolates each. Among the isolates assigned to R. leguminosarum, two-thirds were ineffective in nitrogen fixation with P. vulgaris and harbored a symbiotic gene typical of the biovar viciae. The S. fredii-like isolates did not nodulate soybean plants but formed numerous effective nodules on P. vulgaris. Comparison of nodC gene sequences showed that their symbiotic genotype was not related to that of S. fredii, but to that of the S. fredii-like reference strain GR-06, which was isolated from a bean plant grown in a Spanish soil. An additional genotype including 16% of isolates was found to be closely related to species of the genus Agrobacterium. However, when re-examined, these isolates did not nodulate their original host.  相似文献   

18.
Two sequenced nodulation regions of lupin Bradyrhizobium sp. WM9 carried the majority of genes involved in the Nod factor production. The nod region I harbored: nolA, nodD, nodA, nodB, nodC, nodS, nodI, nodJ, nolO, nodZ, fixR, nifA, fixA, nodM, nolK and noeL. This gene arrangement resembled that found in the nodulation region of Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA110, however strain WM9 harbored only one nodD gene copy, while the nodM, nolK and noeL genes had no counterparts in the 410 kb symbiotic region of strain USDA110. Region II harbored nolL and nodW, but lacked an nodV gene. Both regions carried ORFs that lacked similarity to the published USDA110 sequences, though they had homologues in symbiotic regions of Rhizobium etli, Sinorhizobium sp. NGR234 and Mesorhizobium loti. These differences in gene content, as well as a low average sequence identity (70%) of symbiotic genes with respect to B. japonicum USDA110 were in contrast with the phylogenetic relationship of USDA110 and WM9 revealed by the analysis of 16S rDNA and dnaK sequences. This most likely reflected an early divergence of symbiotic loci, and possible co-speciation with distinct legumes. During this process the loss of a noeI gene and the acquisition of a nolL gene could be regarded as an adaptation towards these legumes that responded to Nod factors carrying 4-O-acetylfucose rather than 2-O-methylfucose. This explained various responses of lupins and serradella plants to infection by mutants in nodZ and nolL genes, knowing that serradella is a stringent legume while lupins are more promiscuous legumes. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

19.
20.
We isolated and characterized CE3003, a Tn5-induced mutant with altered colony morphology derived from Rhizobium etli CE3. CE3003 produced domed colonies and was highly hydrophobic as indicated by its ability to partition into hexadecane, whereas its parent produced flat colonies and was hydrophilic. On bean plants, CE3003 induced nodules and reduced acetylene. CE3003 and CE3 grew at similar rates when they were grown separately or together in culture medium or inoculated singly onto bean seeds. However, when they were mixed at a 1:1 ratio and applied to seeds, CE3003 achieved significantly lower populations than CE3 in the rhizosphere. Five days after coinoculation of CE3 and CE3003, the population of the mutant was less than 10% of the population of CE3 in the bean rhizosphere. To determine the nodulation competitiveness of the mutant, it was coinoculated with CE3 at various ratios at planting, and the ratio of the nodules occupied by each strain was determined 21 days later. A 17,000-fold excess of CE3003 in mixed inocula was required to obtain equal nodule occupancy by the two strains. A genomic library of strain CE3 was mobilized into CE3003, and we identified a cosmid, pRA3003, that restored the parental colony morphology and hydrophilicity to the mutant. Restoration of the parental colony morphology was accompanied by recovery of the ability to grow competitively in the rhizosphere and to compete for nodulation of beans. The data show an association between cell surface hydrophobicity, nodulation competitiveness, and competitive growth in the rhizosphere in mutant CE3003.  相似文献   

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