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Soils of the Chinese Hubei province show a very high diversity of Sinorhizobium fredii strains
Authors:Camacho M  Santamaría C  Temprano F  Rodríguez-Navarro D N  Daza A  Espuny R  Bellogín R  Ollero F J  Lyra de M C C P  Buendía-Clavería A  Zhou J  Li F D  Mateos C  Velázquez E  Vinardell J M  Ruiz-Sainz J E
Institution:

aCentro de Formación e Investigación Agraria “Las Torres y Tomejil”, Sevilla, Spain

bDepartamento de Microbiología, Facultad de Biología, Universidad de Sevilla, Spain

cDepartment of Microbiology, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuhan, Hubei, China

dDepartamento de Microbiología y Parasitología, Facultad de Farmacia, Universidad de Sevilla, Spain

eDepartamento de Microbiología y Genética, Universidad de Salamanca, Spain

Abstract:Biodiversity studies of native soybean-nodulating rhizobia in soils from the Chinese Hubei province (Honghu county; pH 8, alluvial soil) have been carried out. Inoculation of an American (Williams) and an Asiatic (Peking) soybean cultivar with eleven soil samples led to the isolation of 167 rhizobia strains. The ratio (%) of slow-/fast-growing isolates was different depending on the trap plant used. All isolates were able to nodulate both cultivars, although the N2-fixation efficiency (measured as plant-top dry weight) was different among them. A total of thirty-three isolates were selected for further characterisation on the basis of physiological parameters, PCR-RFLP of symbiotic genes and Low Molecular Weight RNA, lipopolysaccharide, protein and plasmid profiles. Low Molecular Weight RNA profiling indicates that all the isolates belong to species Sinorhizobium fredii. The dendrogram obtained with the physiological parameters has been useful to classify the isolates at strain level, although plasmid profiling was the most discriminating technique to detect differences among the analysed soybean-rhizobia isolates, showing there is not two isolates identical each other. Plasmid profile analyses also revealed that some of the investigated strains contain low molecular weight plasmids (7-8-kb). They are, to our knowledge, the smallest ever found in rhizobia and they could be the starting point for the construction of the first group of vectors based on a native rhizobia replicon.
Keywords:Soybean  China soils  Sinorhizobium fredii  Low Molecular Weight RNA profiles  biodiversity  inoculants
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