Abstract

Site-directed Tn5 mutagenesis by gene replacement method, via homologous recombination, was used to identify symbiotically essential regions in the genome of cowpea Rhizobium spp. IRc78. Transposon insertions with-in the nifK hybridizing region or in the regions spanning 10 kb downstream of the nifK have revealed the presence of functional genes required for nitrogen fixation. Six single Tn5 insertions resulted in nod+ fix− phenotypes and one in nod+ but reduced fix+ phenotype. All seven Tn5 insertions were stable before, during and after plant passage. However, IRc78 transconjugants containing duplicated nif copies, (a normal and a Tn5 inserted copy separated by vector sequences) were unstable. In five IRc78::Tn5 strains, the mutant phenotypes were corrected by an extrachromosomally stable vector containing wild type nif alleles. Our experiments suggest that the correction to nod+ fix+ phenotype is by complementation although correction by recombination cannot be completely excluded.

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