Abstract
A soil population of 16 Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. trifolii isolates was characterized by using three Sym (for symbiotic) plasmid-specific DNA hybridization probes: (i) an R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii-specific, repeated-sequence probe; (ii) a nifHDK gene probe, and (iii) a nod gene probe. A predominant Sym plasmid family was identified among the isolates. Three other unrelated Sym plasmid families were also identified. The isolates were also classified either by using a chromosomal DNA hybridization probe or by serological relatedness to 25 different R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii antisera. With either method, it was possible to group the 16 soil isolates into identical or related families. However, the correlation between the two techniques was not high. Irrespective of the means used to classify the bacterial host strain, it was possible to identify the same Sym plasmids in unrelated strains, as well as unrelated Sym plasmids in identical host strains. These data indicate that, within this soil population, there has been genetic exchange of Sym plasmids, and in one instance the hybridization pattern indicates that in vivo recombination of two different Sym plasmids may have occurred. Symbiotic effectiveness tests on red, strawberry, and subterranean clovers clearly differentiated the isolates. In general, the pattern of response was similar within groupings on the basis of Sym plasmid and chromosomal profiles but different between such groups.
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