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1.
A total of 354 indigenous bradyrhizobia were isolated from soybean nodules collected from five major crop grown regions. Host-specific 12 phages, each active on particular strains were selected. Factors, which influence the interaction between the host and phage, were examined. Four different types of plaques were detected. Nearly 17% of isolates were found resistant to all phages. Phage sensitivity patterns revealed a total of 32 distinct phage genotype groups. Different set of phage combinations expressed variation in specificity for parasitizing against particular group of rhizobia. Distributions of isolates in each phage types differed markedly between regions. Interestingly, nine strains belonging to phage group 16 exhibited high ex planta nitrogenase activity in culture. However, no correlation could be established between high ex planta nitrogenase activity and their symbiotic effectiveness with soybean cultivars. Soybean cv. JS335 showed relatively superior performance than Bragg and Lee with indigenous bradyrhizobial strains. Phage typing revealed the existence of large genetic diversity among native rhizobia and selection of the superior bradyrhizobial strains can also be possible for a given soil-climate-cultivar complex.  相似文献   

2.
Rhizobial inoculation plays an important role in yielding enhancement of soybean, but it is frequently disturbed by competition with bacterial population present in the soil. Identification of potential indigenous rhizobia as competitive inoculants for efficient nodulation and N(2)-fixation of soybean was assessed under laboratory and field conditions. Two indigenous bradyrhizobial isolates (MPSR033 and MPSR220) and its derived different antibiotic (streptomycin and gentamicin) and phage (RT5 and RT6)-resistant mutant strains were used for competition study. Nodulation occupancy between parent and mutant strains was compared on soybean cultivar JS335 under exotic condition. Strain MPSR033 Sm(r)?V(r) was found highly competitive for nodule occupancy in all treatment combinations. On the basis of laboratory experiments four indigenous strains (MPSR033, MPSR033 Sm(r), MPSR033 Sm(r)?V(r), MPSR220) were selected for their symbiotic performance along with two exotic strains (USDA123 and USDA94) on two soybean cultivars under field conditions. A significant symbiotic interaction between Bradyrhizobium strains and soybean cultivar was observed. Strain MPSR033 Sm(r)?V(r) was found superior among the rhizobial treatments in seed yield production with both cultivars. The 16S rRNA region sequence analysis of the indigenous strains showed close relationship with Bradyrhizobium yuanmingense strain. These findings widen out the usefulness of antibiotic-resistance marked phage-resistant bradyrhizobial strains in interactive mode for studying their symbiotic effectiveness with host plant, and open the way to study the mechanism of contact-dependent growth inhibition in rhizobia.  相似文献   

3.
Nodulation, acetylene reduction activity, dry matter accumulation, and total nitrogen accumulation by nodulated plants growing in a nitrogen-free culture system were used to compare the symbiotic effectiveness of the fast-growing Rhizobium fredii USDA 191 with that of the slow-growing Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110 in symbiosis with five soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) cultivars. Measurement of the amount of nitrogen accumulated during a 20-day period of vegetative growth (28 to 48 days after transplanting) showed that USDA 110 fixed 3.7, 39.1, 4.6, and 57.3 times more N2 than did USDA 191 with cultivars Pickett 71, Harosoy 63, Lee, and Ransom as host plants, respectively. With the unimproved Peking cultivar as the host plant, USDA 191 fixed 3.3 times more N2 than did the USDA 110 during the 20-day period. The superior N2 fixation capability of USDA 110 with the four North American cultivars as hosts resulted primarily from higher nitrogenase activity per unit nodule mass (specific acetylene reduction activity) and higher nodule mass per plant. The higher N2-fixation capability of USDA 191 with the Peking cultivar as host resulted primarily from higher nodule mass per plant, which was associated with higher nodule numbers. There was significant variation in the N2-fixation capabilities of the four North American cultivar-USDA 191 symbioses. Pickett 71 and Lee cultivars fixed significantly more N2 in symbiosis with USDA 191 than did the Harosoy 63 and Ransom cultivars. This quantitative variation in N2-fixation capability suggests that the total incompatibility (effectiveness of nodulation and efficiency of N2 fixation) of host soybean plants and R. fredii strains is regulated by more than one host plant gene. These results indicate that it would not be prudent to introduce R. fredii strains into North American agricultural systems until more efficient N2-fixing symbioses between North American cultivars and these fast-growing strains can be developed. When inoculum containing equal numbers of USDA 191 and of strain USDA 110 was applied to the unimproved Peking cultivar in Perlite pot culture, 85% of the 160 nodules tested were occupied by USDA 191. With Lee and Ransom cultivars, 99 and 85% of 140 and 96 nodules tested, respectively, were occupied by USDA 110.  相似文献   

4.
In the current study, we recovered sixteen bradyrhizobial isolates from root nodules of two soybean genotypes (JS 335 and PK 472) grown in two distinct agro-climatic conditions (Bundi and Udaipur) of Rajasthan, India. Symbiotic effectiveness of these isolates was evaluated under greenhouse conditions. On the basis of statistical analysis of data (ANOVA followed by LSD P ? 0.05), four effective isolates namely BJ335-1, BPK-3, BPK-5 and UJ335-1 were screened out from the greenhouse experiment. The compatibility to three soybean genotypes, and the competitive ability with other field population of rhizobia, of these four isolates was further determined by conducting field trial. Results demonstrated significant variation in the symbiotic potential of tested isolates with respect to different soybean genotypes. Response of soybean genotype JS 335 towards inoculation was relatively better suggesting its suitability in the Haroti region of Rajasthan. Moreover, BJ 335-1 and BPK-3 isolates were found to be highly efficient as they significantly improved the nodulation, plant growth and seed yield. Possible factors responsible for variable response of bradyrhizobial isolates towards inoculation in three soybean genotypes are discussed. Further, the inoculants production of effective isolates at large scale and their multilocational trials are required to check their suitability for the other agro-climatic conditions.  相似文献   

5.
Strains in Bradyrhizobium japonicum serocluster 123 are the major indigenous competitors for nodulation in a large portion of the soybean production area of the United States. Serocluster 123 is defined by the serotype strains USDA 123, USDA 127, and USDA 129. The objective of the work reported here was to evaluate the ability of two soybean genotypes, PI 377578 and PI 417566, to restrict the nodulation and reduce the competitiveness of serotype strains USDA 123, USDA 127, and USDA 129 in favor of the highly effective strain CB1809 and to determine how these soybean genotypes alter the competitive relationships among the three serotype strains in the serocluster. The soybean genotypes PI 377578 and PI 417566 along with the commonly grown cultivar Williams were planted in soil essentially free of soybean rhizobia and inoculated with single-strain treatments of USDA 123, USDA 127, USDA 129, or CB1809 and six dual-strain competition treatments of USDA 123, USDA 127, or USDA 129 versus CB1809, USDA 123 versus USDA 127, USDA 123 versus USDA 129, and USDA 127 versus USDA 129. PI 377578 severely reduced the nodulation and competitiveness of USDA 123 and USDA 127, while PI 417566 similarly affected the nodulation and competitiveness of USDA 129. Thus, the two soybean genotypes can reduce the nodulation and competitiveness of each of the three serocluster 123 serotype strains. Our results indicate that host control of restricted nodulation and reduced competitiveness is quite specific and effectively discriminates between B. japonicum strains which are serologically related.  相似文献   

6.
The effects of preexposure of soybean (Glycine max L. Merrill) roots to Rhizobium japonicum strains and subsequent establishment of other strains in the nodules were investigated by using combinations of effective strains (USDA 110 and USDA 138) and effective-ineffective strains (USDA 110 and SM-5). Strain USDA 110 was a better competitor than either USDA 138 or SM-5 on cultivars Lee and Peking. However, when either of the two less-competitive strains was inoculated into 2-day-old seedlings before USDA 110 was, their nodule occupancy increased significantly on both cultivars. With USDA 138 as the primary inoculum and USDA 110 delayed for 6, 48, and 168 h, the incidence of USDA 138 nodules increased on cultivar Peking from 6% (at zero time) to 28, 70, and 82% and on cultivar Lee from 17% (at zero time) to 32, 88, and 95% for the three time delays, respectively. Preexposure of 2-week-old roots of cultivar Lee to USDA 138 had essentially the same effect: the incidence of USDA 138 nodules increased from 23% at zero time to 89 and 97% when USDA 110 was delayed for 24 and 72 h, respectively. When the ineffective strain SM-5 was used as the primary inoculum, followed by USDA 110 72 h later, the percentage of nodules containing SM-5 increased from 7 to 76%. These results indicate that the early events in the nodulation process of soybeans are perhaps the most critical for competition among R. japonicum strains.  相似文献   

7.
Five strains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum (USDA 6, 110, 122, 138, and 143) were screened in cell culture for tolerance to acidity (pH 4.2, 4.4, and 4.6) and Al (0, 3, 4, 5, and 6 mg L–1) under low P conditions. Each strain was later grown in association with seven soybean [Glycine max. (L) Merr.] cultivars which were also screened for tolerance to the same stresses in nutrient culture to determine which soybean-Bradyrhizobium combinations would establish the most effective symbiotic N2 fixing relationships. Results indicated that strains USDA 110 and 6 were more tolerant than USDA 122, 138 and 143 with USDA 110 being the most tolerant. Acidity appeared to be the more severe stress; but even when strains showed tolerance to the stresses, cell numbers were significantly reduced. This suggests that colonization of soils and soybean roots can be adversely affected under similar conditions in the field which may result in reduced nodulation. The strains found to be more tolerant to the stresses were more effective N2 fixers in symbiosis with all soybean cultivars, with USDA 110 being definitely superior. The association between the more tolerant strains and cultivars had the largest nitrogenase activity. Further studies on the inclusion of tolerant Bradyrhizobium strains in inoculum used on tolerant soybean cultivars in the field are warranted.  相似文献   

8.
A 200-megadalton plasmid was mobilized from Rhizobium japonicum USDA 191 to other Rhizobium strains either that cannot nodulate soybeans or that form Fix- nodules on certain cultivars. The symbiotic properties of the transconjugants indicate that both soybean specificity for nodulation and cultivar specificity for nitrogen fixation are plasmid encoded.  相似文献   

9.
Summary Two rhizobial strains (QB1130 and C3A) from northeast China were identified asRhizobium fredii on the basis of growth rate, media acidification and growth on a wide range of carbon substrates. The strains were shown to be distinct from USDA 191 on the basis of plasmid number and size. Bothnif and commonnod genes were located on the 295 kb plasmid of strains QB1130 and USDA 191, while onlynif genes were identified on this plasmid in C3A. When used to inoculate four commercial soybean (Glycine max) cultivars, one of the strains (C3A) was found to be ineffective, while the other (QB1130) was at least as effective as USDA 191, a strain ofR. fredii reported to be widely effective on North American cultivars of soybean. Further, QB1130 was capable of more effective nodulation of cowpea or the uncultivated soybean line, Peking, than either USDA 191 or the slow-growingBradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 16. Strain QB1130 should be useful for studies directed at improving symbiotic performance in soybean, or for studies of the comparative physiology and genetics of FG and SG strains on a single host.  相似文献   

10.
We have isolated a colonial derivative of Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA 110 (designated MN-110) that is both mannitol utilizing and N(2) fixing. Derivative MN-110 showed growth on mannitol and glucose similar to that of non-N(2)-fixing, mannitol-utilizing L2-110. Derivative MN-110 showed high constitutive and induced d-mannitol dehydrogenase activity (similar to L2-110) relative to N(2)-fixing, non-mannitol-utilizing I-110. Hybridization to EcoRI and HindIII total DNA digests with cloned USDA 110 nif DK and nif H genes revealed similar patterns for non-N(2)-fixing mannitol-utilizing derivative L1-110 and derivative MN-110. Symbiotic tests with soybean cultivars Ransom and Lee indicate MN-110 to be a superior N(2)-fixing derivative compared with derivative I-110 and the parent strain USDA 110. However, these differences were not revealed when comparing 28-day-old soybean-B. japonicum associations but were apparent in 49-day-old associations. It was apparent from this work that mannitol utilization was not necessarily correlated to symbiotic effectiveness in B. japonicum and that gene rearrangements were not responsible for differences in N(2) fixation between L1-110 or L2-110 and MN-110.  相似文献   

11.
Symbiotic effectiveness of 19 indigenous and two exotic (USDA 2426 and USDA 2431) strains of lentil Rhizobium belonging to different phage-sensitive and phage-resistant groups was compared under axenic condition. Four strains (USDA 2431, BHULR 104, BHULR 113, and BHULR 115) sensitive to different phages were found significantly superior over others in terms of nodule number, acetylene reduction activity, and total dry weight per plant. Inoculation response of these strains was then evaluated on six lentil cultivars under field condition. A significant symbiotic interaction between rhizobial strains and lentil cultivars was observed. Grain yield enhancement was noticed by the compatible interaction of lentil cultivars HUL-57, L-4147, K-75, and PL-4/DPL-15/DPL-62 with rhizobial strains USDA 2431, BHULR 104, BHULR 113, and BHULR 115, respectively. The authentication of rhizobial strains was accomplished through 16S rDNA sequence analysis. All rhizobial strains had close matching with R. leguminosarum bv. viciae strains. The results have shown that phages can trustfully help selecting out the symbiotically efficient most rhizobial strains for advantageous use with lentil cultivars, in order to strengthen the BNF-based future lentil breeding programs.  相似文献   

12.
The Yellow mosaic disease is caused by Mungbean yellow mosaic India virus (MYMIV) and Mungbean yellow mosaic virus (MYMV) belonging to the genus Begomovirus of the family Geminiviridae. Yellow mosaic disease (YMD) is a major constraint to the production of soybean in South-East Asia. In India, yield losses of 10–88% had been reported due to YMD of soybean. An effort has been made to generate resistant soybean plants, by a construct targeting replication initiation protein (Rep) gene sequences of MYMIV. A construct containing the sequences of Rep gene (566?bp) in antisense orientation was used to transform cotyledonary node explants of three soybean cultivars (JS 335, JS 95-60 and NRC 37). Transformation efficiencies of 0.2, 0.21 and 0.24% were obtained with three soybean cultivars, JS 335, JS 95-60 and NRC 37, respectively. The presence of transgene in T1 plants was confirmed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and sequence analysis. The level of resistance was observed by challenge inoculation with the virus in T1 lines. The inheritance of transgene showed classical Mendelian pattern in six transgenic lines.  相似文献   

13.
This study investigated differences in sensitivity to nitrate of soybean (Glycine max cv. Davis) symbioses with 16 different Rhizobium japonicum strains. When nitrate (20 mM) was added to established symbioses, there were no significant differences in the degree of inhibition of acetylene reduction for any of the 16 strains. When nitrate was present during the establishment of nodules, high levels of nitrate (10 mM) were equally inhibitory on all symbioses, whereas specific strain effects appeared at low (0.5 mM) to medium (2.0 mM) levels of nitrate. At 1.5 mM nitrate in solution culture, the days to emergence of nodules varied from less than 10 (CB:1809, Nit61A118) to more than 16 (11 of 16 strains). In a clay-pot trial maintained at the low nitrate level (0.5 mM), symbioses with CB:1809 increased total nodule mass by 30% relative to nitrate-free controls. In the presence of 2.0 mM nitrate, CB:1809 maintained total nodule mass. For the remaining 6 strains tested, total nodule mass decreased to below the levels of the nitrate-free controls. In a separate clay pot trial, CB:1809 increased its competitive ability relative to USDA:110 when nitrate was added. If no nitrate was added, CB:1809 occupied 0.97 times as many nodules as USDA:110; when 10 mM nitrate was added, CB:1809 occupied 1.75 times as many nodules as USDA:110. Attempts to select nitrogen-adapted substrains of R. japonicum through sequential isolation and infection of plants grown on nitrate were not successful.  相似文献   

14.
The symbiotic potential of Bradyrhizobium japonicum isolates indigenous to seven Korean soils was evaluated by inoculating soybeans with 10- and 1,000-fold-diluted soil suspensions (whole-soil inocula). At both levels, significant differences in the symbiotic potential of the indigenous B. japonicum isolates were demonstrated. The relationship between rhizobial numbers in the whole-soil inocula (x) and nitrogen fixation parameters (y) was best predicted by a straight line (y = a + bx) when the numbers in the inocula were 100 to 10,000 ml-1, while the power curve (y = axb) predicted the variation when the numbers were 1 to 100 ml-1. Thirty isolates from three soils showed wide differences in effectiveness (measured as milligrams of shoot N per plant), and several were of equal or greater effectiveness than reference strain B. japonicum USDA 110 on soybean cultivars Clark and Jangbaekkong. On both of the soybean cultivars grown in a Hawaiian mollisol, the Korean B. japonicum isolate YCK 213 and USDA 110 were of equal effectiveness; USDA 110 was the superior strain in colonization (nodule occupancy). Korean isolates YCK 117 and YCK 141 were superior colonizers compared with USDA 110. However, B. japonicum USDA 123 was the superior colonizer compared with isolates YCK 213, YCK 141, and YCK 117. In an immunoblot analysis of 97 indigenous Korean isolates of B. japonicum, 41% fell into the USDA 110 and USDA 123 serogroups. Serogroups USDA 110 and USDA 123 were represented in six of the seven soils examined. In one Korean soil, 100% of the B. japonicum isolates reacted only with antisera of YCK 117, an isolate from the same soil.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Root hairs and phosphorus acquisition of wheat and barley cultivars   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Several genes that restrict nodulation with specific Bradyrhizobiumstrains are known in Glycine max (soybean), and a similar system of nodulation restriction has recently been discovered in the related North American legume Amphicarpaea bracteata. We analyzed how nodulation-restrictive genotypes of each plant interacted with Bradyrhizobium strains sampled from the other host species. Ten bacterial isolates from A. bracteata that nodulated differentially with genotypes of their homologous host legume showed uniform responses to two soybean isogenic lines that differed at the Rj4 locus controlling nodulation restriction: all isolates formed nodules of normal size and morphology on both isolines. However, little or no nitrogen fixation occurred in any of these symbioses. A. bracteata genotypes that displayed broad vs. restricted symbiotic phenotypes toward naturally-associated bradyrhizobia were also tested with two bacterial isolates from soybean (USDA 76 and USDA 123). Both isolates formed nodules and fixed nitrogen in association with both A. bracteata genotypes. However, symbiotic effectiveness (as measured by acetylene reduction assays) was normal only for the combination of USDA 76 with the restrictive A. bracteata genotype. Overall, these results indicate that plant genes that restrict nodulation by certain naturally-associated bradyrhizobia do not confer comparable specificity when plants interact with bacteria from another related legume species.  相似文献   

17.
Soybean (Glycine max) is an introduced crop in India. Over the years it has been regularly inoculated with indigenous rhizobia. In this study genetic diversity has been studied at a site where soybean has been regularly grown with inoculation. Rhizobia were plant trapped using soybean varieties as host, and fingerprinted using BOX-PCR. BOX-PCR genomic fingerprints of 69 isolates from the nodules of 4 soybean varieties Pusa22, Bragg, PK1041 and PK1142 showed a high level of genetic diversity. The population profiles of the 69 isolates clustered them into 10 groups. Root nodule isolates from the four varieties were Bradyrhizobium japonicum types, growing in 4–7 days with typical colonies which were found to be genetically distinct from the USDA and SEMIA strains of B. japonicum and B. elkanii. Also the genotype of the host plant seemed to be one of the factors determining the diversity. The high diversity could be attributed both to lateral transfer of genetic material between inoculant and indigenous strains and to genomic rearrangements during the adaptation to the Indian soils.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The influence of five Thai soybean cultivars on nodulation competitiveness of four Bradyrhizobium japonicum strains was investigated. Cultures of B. japonicum strains THA5, THA6, USDA110 and SEMIA5019 were mixed with each other prior to inoculating germinated soybean seeds growing in Leonard jars with nitrogen-free nutrient solution. At harvest, nodule occupancy by each strain was determined by a fluorescent antibody technique. The term ‘general competitive ability’ was introduced to describe the average competitive nodule occupancy of a strain in paired co-inoculation with a number of strains on soybean. The nodule occupancies by an individual strain were directly correlated with the proportions of that strain in the inoculum mixtures. USDA110 showed higher nodulation competitiveness than the other strains on three of the five cultivars. The Thai strain THA6 appeared to be more competitive than USDA110 on cultivar SJ5. Thus, nodulation competitiveness of the B. japonicum strains was affected by the cultivars of soybean used. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

20.
Using transponson Tn5 mutagenesis, two transconjugants of Bradyrhizobium japonicum with the properties of both phage resistance and ability to induce nodulation were isolated at the frequency of 0.02%. These transconjugants were tested for their symbiotic performance on soybean cv. JS335 under greenhouse and field conditions. Both phage-resistant mutants induced nodules (nod (+)), but the transconjugant B. japonicum E13 was ineffective in nitrogen fixation (fix (-)). Rhizobiophage presence in the inoculum of phage-resistant mutants did not influence the symbiotic effectiveness. The mixture of wild strain and phage in the inoculum caused reduced symbiotic performance under controlled conditions, while under a field environment phage (100 and 500 mul of approximately 10(8) particles ml(-1)) presence did not have any recognizable effect on increased nodule dry weight, nitrogenase activity, or foliar N(2) content. On the basis of restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis, phage-sensitive, less effective, homologous bradyrhizobia belonging to B. japonicum were detected in root nodules of both inoculated and uninoculated plants. Inoculation of a higher concentration of phage in the inoculum significantly reduced the symbiotic performance, while the lower concentration of phage did not show any effect on phage-susceptible, less effective, homologous bradyrhizobia or, thus, symbiotic efficiency under field conditions. The phage-resistant mutant B. japonicum A49 showed effective symbiosis as efficient as that of the wild strain. Inoculation of phage-resistant mutants with lytic phage may reduce the occupancy of phage-susceptible, ineffective/less effective/mediocre homologous bradyrhizobia strains under natural complex soil conditions.  相似文献   

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