scholarly journals Nodule carbohydrate catabolism is enhanced in the Medicago truncatula A17-Sinorhizobium medicae WSM419 symbiosis

2014 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Estíbaliz Larrainzar ◽  
Erena Gil-Quintana ◽  
Amaia Seminario ◽  
Cesar Arrese-Igor ◽  
Esther M. González
Author(s):  
Prithwi Ghosh ◽  
Katie N. Adolphsen ◽  
Svetlana N. Yurgel ◽  
Michael L. Kahn

Some soil bacteria called rhizobia can interact symbiotically with legumes in which they form nodules on the plant roots where they can reduce atmospheric dinitrogen to ammonia, a form of nitrogen that can be used by growing plants. Rhizobia/plant combinations can differ in how successful this symbiosis is—Sinorhizobium meliloti Rm1021 forms a relatively ineffective symbiosis with Medicago truncatula Jemalong A17 but Sinorhizobium medicae WSM419 is able to support more vigorous plant growth. Using proteomic data from free-living and symbiotic S. medicae WSM419, we previously identified a subset of proteins that were not closely related to any S. meliloti Rm1021 proteins and speculated that adding one or more of these proteins to S. meliloti Rm1021 would increase its effectiveness on M. truncatula A17. Three genes, Smed_3503, Smed_5985, and Smed_6456, were cloned into S. meliloti Rm1021 downstream of the E. coli lacZ promoter. Strains with these genes increased nodulation and improved plant growth, individually and in combination with one another. Smed_3503, renamed iseA (increased symbiotic effectiveness) had the largest impact, increasing M. truncatula biomass by 61%. iseA homologs were present in all currently sequenced S. medicae strains but were infrequent in other Sinorhizobium isolates. Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae 3841 containing iseA led to more nodules on pea and lentil. Split root experiments with M. truncatula A17 indicated that S. meliloti Rm1021 carrying the S. medicae iseA is less sensitive to plant induced resistance to rhizobial infection, suggesting an interaction with the plant’s regulation of nodule formation. IMPORTANCE The legume symbiosis with rhizobia is highly specific. Rhizobia that can nodulate and fix nitrogen on one legume species are often unable to associate with a different species. The interaction can be more subtle—symbiotically enhanced growth of the host plant can differ substantially when nodules are formed by different rhizobial isolates of a species, much like disease severity can differ when conspecific isolates of pathogenic bacteria infect different cultivars. Much is known about bacterial genes essential for a productive symbiosis, but less is understood about genes that marginally improve performance. We used a proteomic strategy to identify Sinorhizobium genes that contribute to plant growth differences that are seen when two different strains nodulate M. truncatula A17. These genes could also alter the symbiosis between R. leguminosarum bv. viciae 3841 and pea or lentil, suggesting that this approach may identify new genes that may more generally contribute to symbiotic productivity.


2008 ◽  
Vol 74 (18) ◽  
pp. 5653-5661 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cécile Rangin ◽  
Brigitte Brunel ◽  
Jean-Claude Cleyet-Marel ◽  
Marie-Mathilde Perrineau ◽  
Gilles Béna

ABSTRACT We investigated the genetic diversity and symbiotic efficiency of 223 Sinorhizobium sp. isolates sampled from a single Mediterranean soil and trapped with four Medicago truncatula lines. DNA molecular polymorphism was estimated by capillary electrophoresis-single-stranded conformation polymorphism and restriction fragment length polymorphism on five loci (IGSNOD , typA, virB11, avhB11, and the 16S rRNA gene). More than 90% of the rhizobia isolated belonged to the Sinorhizobium medicae species (others belonged to Sinorhizobium meliloti), with different proportions of the two species among the four M. truncatula lines. The S. meliloti population was more diverse than that of S. medicae, and significant genetic differentiation among bacterial populations was detected. Single inoculations performed in tubes with each bacterial genotype and each plant line showed significant bacterium-plant line interactions for nodulation and N2 fixation levels. Competition experiments within each species highlighted either strong or weak competition among genotypes within S. medicae and S. meliloti, respectively. Interspecies competition experiments showed S. meliloti to be more competitive than S. medicae for nodulation. Although not highly divergent at a nucleotide level, isolates collected from this single soil sample displayed wide polymorphism for both nodulation and N2 fixation. Each M. truncatula line might influence Sinorhizobium soil population diversity differently via its symbiotic preferences. Our data suggested that the two species did not evolve similarly, with S. meliloti showing polymorphism and variable selective pressures and S. medicae showing traces of a recent demographic expansion. Strain effectiveness might have played a role in the species and genotype proportions, but in conjunction with strain adaptation to environmental factors.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (7) ◽  
pp. e0180894 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aaron J. Ogden ◽  
Mahmoud Gargouri ◽  
JeongJin Park ◽  
David R. Gang ◽  
Michael L. Kahn

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