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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, November 2006, p. 7365-7367, Vol. 72, No. 11
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.00889-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Rapid In Situ Evolution of Nodulating Strains for Biserrula pelecinus L. through Lateral Transfer of a Symbiosis Island from the Original Mesorhizobial Inoculant
Kemanthi G. Nandasena,*
Graham W. O'Hara,
Ravi P. Tiwari, and
John G. Howieson
Centre for Rhizobium Studies, Murdoch University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Received 14 April 2006/
Accepted 14 August 2006

ABSTRACT
Diverse rhizobia able to nodulate
Biserrula pelecinus evolved
following in situ transfer of
nodA and
nifH from an inoculant
to soil bacteria. Transfer of these chromosomal genes and the
presence of an identical integrase gene adjacent to a Phe tRNA
gene in both the inoculant and recipients indicate that there
was lateral transfer of a symbiosis island.

INTRODUCTION
The rates at which rhizobial populations diversify and the evolutionary
forces structuring the genetic divergence of rhizobial populations
in Australian soils are largely unknown. An opportunity to observe
the in situ development of rhizobial diversity arose after the
introduction of the pasture legume
Biserrula pelecinus L. from
the Mediterranean region to Western Australia (W.A.). Numerous
field experiments during the past 12 years revealed that the
indigenous rhizobial populations in W.A. were not capable of
nodulating
B. pelecinus. Parallel studies have clearly shown
that symbiotically impaired, genetically and phenotypically
diverse strains able to nodulate
B. pelecinus recently emerged
following the sowing of inoculated seed of this legume in W.A.
(unpublished data). In 1994 a field site at Northam, W.A., was
established using surface-sterilized seeds of
B. pelecinus cv.
Casbah inoculated with a single mesorhizobial strain, WSM1271,
originating from Sardinia (
5). The aim of the current study
was to determine whether there was in situ transfer of symbiotic
genes from WSM1271 to four diverse strains (N17, N18, N45, and
N87) isolated in 2000 from nodules on
B. pelecinus growing at
the Northam site.

Comparison of the nodA and nifH sequences of Biserrula mesorhizobia.
The
nodA nodulation gene determines the type of N-acyl substitution
transferred onto the oligosaccharide backbone of Nod factor
(
1). A 567-bp intragenic
nodA fragment was amplified with two
primers, nodA-KF (5'-GGTTATGCTGGGAAAATGAGTTGC-3') and nodA-KR
(5'-CATAGCTCTGGACCGTTCC-3'), designed by aligning the
nodA sequences
of
Mesorhizobium loti strains MAFF303099 and ICMP3153. Standard
PCR mixture and cycling conditions were used, with five initial
cycles (annealing at 52°C), followed by 30 cycles (annealing
at 55°C). Two other primers, nodA-midF (5'-CGGGGTGCGTCGGGATCTTG-3')
and nodA-midR (5'-CCGAACCGTGCCGAAAGCGAATGG-3'), were developed
from the middle overlapping region of the sequences obtained
by using nodA-KF and nodA-KR. All four primers were used to
obtain a double-stranded DNA sequence of
nodA. Nitrogenase is
the key enzyme in nitrogen fixation, and
nifH is responsible
for the structural development of component II of nitrogenase
(
11). A 710-bp intragenic
nifH fragment was amplified using
primers nifH-1 and nifH-2 (
2). Two other primers, nifH-midF
(5'-AGCCGAACACCGCCCGAATG-3') and nifH-midR (5'-CTCGGGGACGTGGTTTGCG-3'),
were developed in a manner similar to the manner described above
for
nodA, and all four primers were used to obtain a double-stranded
DNA sequence of
nifH. Remarkably, the sequences of both genes
from the four diverse strains (N17, N18, N45, and N87) exhibited
100% identity to the sequences of the same genes in WSM1271.
To put this finding in context, we compared these sequences
with the sequences of
nodA and
nifH genes in three strains of
Biserrula mesorhizobia of Mediterranean origin (WSM1283, WSM1284,
and WSM1497). There were 2-bp and 5-bp mismatches for
nodA and
nifH, respectively, between WSM1283 and WSM1271. There were
156-bp and 48-bp mismatches for
nodA and
nifH, respectively,
between WSM1284 and WSM1271, while there were 14-bp and 4-bp
mismatches for
nodA and
nifH, respectively, between WSM1497
and WSM1271. Phylogenetic trees constructed using
nodA (Fig.
1A) and
nifH (Fig.
1B) clearly show that the identical sequences
in WSM1271 and the four diverse strains are very different from
those in other strains of
Biserrula mesorhizobia and other root
nodule bacteria. It is quite common to find intraspecific nucleotide
variations in either gene (
4,
9). These findings strongly indicate
that the diverse strains obtained both
nodA and
nifH from WSM1271
through lateral transfer.

Localization of nodA and nifH in Biserrula mesorhizobia.
To determine the location of
nodA and
nifH in
Biserrula mesorhizobia,
we searched for plasmid-borne symbiotic genes by first separating
plasmids by Eckhardt gel electrophoresis (
6) and then hybridizing
blotted plasmid DNA to
nodA and
nifH probes using standard procedures
(Boehringer Mannheim). WSM1271 contained a single approximately
500-kb plasmid. WSM1283, WSM1284, WSM1497, and N18 each had
a single plasmid that was slightly larger than the plasmid of
WSM1271, while N17, N45, and N87 lacked a plasmid (Fig.
2A).
The Eckhardt gel procedure was repeated three times with multiple
replicates of each strain to confirm the absence of a plasmid
in N17, N45, and N87. The symbiotic probes did not hybridize
with the plasmid DNA of any strain, while hybridization was
detected in wells containing chromosomal DNA from WSM1271, WSM1283,
WSM1497, N17, N18, N45, and N87 (Fig.
2B), suggesting that
nodA and
nifH are located on the chromosome in these strains.
Biserrula mesorhizobia are closely related to
M. loti (
10). Sullivan and
Ronson (
13) demonstrated that symbiotic genes of
M. loti strain
ICMP3153 are present on a chromosomally located mobile symbiosis
island. Therefore, we investigated whether the symbiotic genes
of
Biserrula mesorhizobia are located on a similar mobile genetic
element.

Symbiosis island insertion site of Biserrula mesorhizobia.
The symbiosis islands in
M. loti strains ICMP3153 and MAFF303099
integrate into a phenylalanine tRNA (Phe tRNA) gene (
13). These
islands contain a gene that codes for a phage P4-like integrase
(
intS) that is responsible for the excision and insertion of
symbiosis islands (
13). This integrase gene is located at one
end of the island and is next to the Phe tRNA gene (
13). Therefore,
a forward primer, phetRNAf (5'-GCCCAGATAGCTCAGTTGGT-3'), was
developed by aligning Phe tRNA gene sequences of the two strains
described above and 10 other diverse bacterial genera. A reverse
primer, intS522r (5'-ATTGCATATCGAAACACG-3'), was developed to
anneal in the midregion of
intS by aligning
intS sequences of
ICMP3153 and MAFF303099. An 800-bp fragment was successfully
amplified for the four Mediterranean
Biserrula mesorhizobia
and the four diverse strains using standard PCR procedures with
annealing at 50°C. A 51-bp region of the Phe tRNA gene,
which did not include the forward primer binding site, was identical
in all eight strains. Furthermore, identical sequences were
present in N17, N18, N45, N87, and WSM1271 for both
intS and
the intergenic region (198 bp) between the Phe tRNA gene and
intS (Fig.
3). There was considerable variation in the sequences
of
intS and the intergenic region among WSM1271, WSM1283, WSM1284,
and WSM1497 (Fig.
3). However, the
intS sequences (1,070 bp)
of the
Biserrula mesorhizobia exhibited >93.5% similarity
to the
intS sequence of
M. loti (data not shown).
The evidence that the Mediterranean
Biserrula mesorhizobia and
the four diverse strains isolated from Northam contain a P4-like
integrase gene similar to that found in the symbiosis islands
of
M. loti and the location of this gene adjacent to a Phe tRNA
gene led us to propose that the symbiotic genes of
Biserrula mesorhizobia are located on a mobile symbiosis island which
integrates into a Phe tRNA gene. These findings confirm that
the diverse and ineffective strains isolated in Northam, W.A.,
that are able to nodulate
B. pelecinus evolved through in situ
transfer of symbiotic genes on a symbiosis island from WSM1271
to resident soil bacteria.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by a postdoctoral research-funded fellowship
from Grains Research and Development Corporation (GRDC) and
Australian Wool Innovation Ltd. (AWI) within the national
Rhizobium program.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Centre for
Rhizobium Studies, Murdoch University, Murdoch, Perth 6150, Western Australia, Australia. Phone: 61 8 9360 2439. Fax: 61 6 9360 6303. E-mail:
kemanthi{at}murdoch.edu.au.

Published ahead of print on 25 August 2006. 

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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, November 2006, p. 7365-7367, Vol. 72, No. 11
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.00889-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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