The nitrate-reduction gene cluster components exert lineage-dependent contributions to optimization of Sinorhizobium symbiosis with soybeans.

Environ Microbiol

State Key Laboratory of Agrobiotechnology, Ministry of Agriculture Key Laboratory of Soil Microbiology, Rhizobium Research Center, and College of Biological Sciences, China Agricultural University, Beijing, China.

Published: December 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how variations in gene content among three Sinorhizobium species affect their ability to form effective symbiotic relationships with soybeans, despite all having nodulation and nitrogen fixation genes.
  • A specific nitrate-reduction gene was found to be crucial for the successful symbiosis of S. fredii, while its absence in S. sojae led to differing outcomes in nitrogen fixation efficiency.
  • Deletion of a particular gene (hemN1) in both S. fredii and S. sp. III resulted in the formation of nitrogen-fixing but ineffective nodules, demonstrating the complex interaction between rhizobial genetics and symbiotic effectiveness.

Article Abstract

Receiving nodulation and nitrogen fixation genes does not guarantee rhizobia an effective symbiosis with legumes. Here, variations in gene content were determined for three Sinorhizobium species showing contrasting symbiotic efficiency on soybeans. A nitrate-reduction gene cluster absent in S. sojae was found to be essential for symbiotic adaptations of S. fredii and S. sp. III. In S. fredii, the deletion mutation of the nap (nitrate reductase), instead of nir (nitrite reductase) and nor (nitric oxide reductase), led to defects in nitrogen-fixation (Fix ). By contrast, none of these core nitrate-reduction genes were required for the symbiosis of S. sp. III. However, within the same gene cluster, the deletion of hemN1 (encoding oxygen-independent coproporphyrinogen III oxidase) in both S. fredii and S. sp. III led to the formation of nitrogen-fixing (Fix ) but ineffective (Eff ) nodules. These Fix /Eff nodules were characterized by significantly lower enzyme activity of glutamine synthetase indicating rhizobial modulation of nitrogen-assimilation by plants. A distant homologue of HemN1 from S. sojae can complement this defect in S. fredii and S. sp. III, but exhibited a more pleotropic role in symbiosis establishment. These findings highlighted the lineage-dependent optimization of symbiotic functions in different rhizobial species associated with the same host.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.13948DOI Listing

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