4.4 Article

Bradyrhizobium niftali sp. nov., an effective nitrogen-fixing symbiont of partridge pea [Chamaecrista fasciculata (Michx.) Greene], a native caesalpinioid legume broadly distributed in the USA

Journal

Publisher

MICROBIOLOGY SOC
DOI: 10.1099/ijsem.0.003640

Keywords

Bradyrhizobium; Caesalpinioideae; Chamaecrista; nodulation; MLSA; ANI; dDDH

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Funding

  1. INCT-Plant-Growth Promoting Microorganisms for Agricultural Sustainability and Environmental Responsibility [CNPq 465133/2014-2]
  2. Embrapa [02.13.08.001.00.00]
  3. CNPq-Universal [400468/2016-6]

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Information about the symbionts of legumes of the Caesalpinioideae subfamily is still limited, and we performed a polyphasic approach with three Bradyrhizobium strains-CNPSo 3448(T), CNPSo 3394 and CNPSo 3442-isolated from Chamaecrista fasciculata, a native legume broadly distributed in the USA. In the phylogenetic analysis of both the 16S rRNA gene and the intergenic transcribed spacer, the CNPSo strains were clustered within the Bradyrhizobium japonicum superclade. Multilocus sequence analysis with six housekeeping genes-glnll, gyrB, recA, rpoB, atpD and dnaK-indicated that Bradyrhizobium diazoefficiens is the closest species, with 83 % of nucleotide identity. In the genome analyses of CNPSo 3448(T), average nucleotide identity and digital DNA-DNA hybridization results confirmed higher similarity with B. diazoefficiens, with values estimated of 93.35 and 51.50 %, respectively, both below the threshold of the same species, confirming that the CNPSo strains represent a new lineage. BOX-PCR profiles indicated high intraspecific genetic diversity between the CNPSo strains. In the analyses of the symbiotic genes nodC and nifH the CNPSo strains were clustered with Bradyrhizobium arachidis, Bradyrhizobium forestalls, Bradyrhizobium cajani, Bradyrhizobium kavangense and Bradyrhizobium vignae, indicating a different phylogenetic history compared to the conserved core genes. Other physiological (C utilization, tolerance to antibiotics and abiotic stresses), chemical (fatty acid profile) and symbiotic (nodulation host range) properties were evaluated and are described. The data from our study support the description of the CNPSo strains as the novel species Bradyrhizobium niftali sp. nov., with CNPSo 3448(T) (=USDA 10051(T) =U687(T) =CL 40(T)) designated as the type strain.

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