Abstract

Genus Frankia is comprised primarily of nitrogen-fixing actinobacteria that form root nodule symbioses with a group of hosts known as the actinorhizal plants. These plants are evolutionarily closely related to the legumes that are nodulated by the rhizobia. Both host groups utilize homologs of nodulation genes for root-nodule symbiosis, derived from common plant ancestors. The corresponding endosymbionts, Frankia and the rhizobia, however, are distantly related groups of bacteria, leading to questions about their symbiotic mechanisms and evolutionary history. To date, a stable system of electrotransformation has been lacking in Frankia despite numerous attempts by research groups worldwide. We have identified type IV methyl-directed restriction systems, highly-expressed in a range of actinobacteria, as a likely barrier to Frankia transformation. Here we report the successful electrotransformation of the model strain F. alni ACN14a with an unmethylated, broad host-range replicating plasmid, expressing chloramphenicol-resistance for selection and GFP as a marker of gene expression. This system circumvented the type IV restriction barrier and allowed the stable maintenance of the plasmid. During nitrogen limitation, Frankia differentiates into two cell types: the vegetative hyphae and nitrogen-fixing vesicles. When the expression of egfp under the control of the nif gene cluster promoter was localized using fluorescence imaging, the expression of nitrogen fixation in nitrogen-limited culture was localized in Frankia vesicles but not in hyphae. The ability to separate gene expression patterns between Frankia hyphae and vesicles will enable deeper comparisons of molecular signaling and metabolic exchange between Frankia-actinorhizal and rhizobia-legume symbioses to be made, and may broaden potential applications in agriculture. Further downstream applications are possible, including gene knock-outs and complementation, to open up a range of experiments in Frankia and its symbioses. Additionally, in the transcriptome of F. alni ACN14a, type IV restriction enzymes were highly expressed in nitrogen-replete culture but their expression strongly decreased during symbiosis. The down-regulation of type IV restriction enzymes in symbiosis suggests that horizontal gene transfer may occur more frequently inside the nodule, with possible new implications for the evolution of Frankia.

Highlights

  • Bacteria in the genus Frankia form nitrogen-fixing root nodule symbioses with a group of host plants, the actinorhizal plants

  • In this study we report successful electrotransformation of Frankia alni ACN14a by using an unmethylated plasmid to circumvent the methylation-targeting restriction enzyme encoded in the ACN14a genome

  • The type IV enzyme was annotated in REBASE as a “Type IV Methyl-directed restriction enzyme” of the methyladenine-directed restriction enzyme (Mrr) methyladenine-targeting family

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Bacteria in the genus Frankia form nitrogen-fixing root nodule symbioses with a group of host plants, the actinorhizal plants. The bacterial symbionts are only distantly related to each, Frankia belongs to the phylum Actinobacteria, comprised of gram-positive bacteria with high-GC genomes. Known to be the sites of nitrogen fixation, are surrounded by a lamellar envelope comprised of hopanoid lipids (Berry et al, 1993) and have high rates of internal oxygen consumption through respiration. Unlike the rhizobia-legume symbioses, where the host nodule tissue regulates the flow of oxygen during nitrogen fixation (Appleby, 1984), most Frankia are capable of fixing nitrogen in the vesicles in atmospheric oxygen conditions under nitrogen limitation (Benson and Silvester, 1993; Gtari et al, 2015). In symbiosis and in vitro, Frankia is capable of forming sporangia containing thick-walled spores (Benson and Silvester, 1993), which apparently serve as a resting stage and as a source of propagules that can enhance nodule numbers (Burleigh and Torrey, 1990)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call