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Endosymbiotic bacteria nodulating a new endemic lupine Lupinus mariae-josephi from alkaline soils in Eastern Spain represent a new lineage within the Bradyrhizobium genus
Authors:Sánchez-Cañizares Carmen  Rey Luis  Durán David  Temprano Francisco  Sánchez-Jiménez Paloma  Navarro Albert  Polajnar Mira  Imperial Juan  Ruiz-Argüeso Tomás
Affiliation:a Departamento de Biotecnología (ETS de Ingenieros Agrónomos) and Centro de Biotecnología y Genómica de Plantas (CBGP), Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, 28040 Madrid, Spain
b IFAPA Las Torres-Tomejil, Carretera de Sevilla-Cazalla Km 12.2, 41200-Alcalá del Rio, Sevilla, Spain
c Generalitat Valenciana, Conselleria de Territorio y Vivienda (CIEF), Avda. Comarques del Pais Valencià, 114. 46930 Quart de Poblet, Valencia, Spain
d University of Ljubljana Biotechnical Faculty, Department of Food Science and Technology, Jamnikarjeva 101, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia
e CSIC, Spain
Abstract:Lupinus mariae-josephi is a recently described endemic Lupinus species from a small area in Eastern Spain where it thrives in soils with active lime and high pH. The L. mariae-josephi root symbionts were shown to be very slow-growing bacteria with different phenotypic and symbiotic characteristics from those of Bradyrhizobium strains nodulating other Lupinus. Their phylogenetic status was examined by multilocus sequence analyses of four housekeeping genes (16S rRNA, glnII, recA, and atpD) and showed the existence of a distinct evolutionary lineage for L. mariae-josephi that also included Bradyrhizobium jicamae. Within this lineage, the tested isolates clustered in three different sub-groups that might correspond to novel sister Bradyrhizobium species. These core gene analyses consistently showed that all the endosymbiotic bacteria isolated from other Lupinus species of the Iberian Peninsula were related to strains of the B. canariense or B. japonicum lineages and were separate from the L. mariae-josephi isolates. Phylogenetic analysis based on nodC symbiotic gene sequences showed that L. mariae-josephi bacteria also constituted a new symbiotic lineage distant from those previously defined in the genus Bradyrhizobium. In contrast, the nodC genes of isolates from other Lupinus spp. from the Iberian Peninsula were again clearly related to the B. canariense and B. japonicum bv. genistearum lineages. Speciation of L. mariae-josephi bradyrhizobia may result from the colonization of a singular habitat by their unique legume host.
Keywords:Bradyrhizobium   Lupinus mariae-josephi   Phylogenetic analysis   Legume symbiosis
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