Abstract

The structure of the plasmid locus containing the sym-genes (nod-, nif-, and fix-operons) was investigated in eight Rhizobium leguminosarum strains differing in their origin and host specificity, including five strains of the viciae biovar—symbionts of pea (3), forage beans (1), and Vavilovia (1)—as well as three strains of the biovar trifolii (clover symbionts). Strains of R. leguminosarum bv. viciae, which possess the nodX gene (controlling acetylation of the Nod factor, which is responsible for the ability of rhizobia to form symbioses with a broad spectrum of hosts, including the “Afghan” pea lines, homozygous by the allele sym2A), are characterized by a less compact location of the sym-genes than the strains lacking the nodX gene. The size of the symbiotic cluster in the strains possessing nodX was 94.5 ± 3.5 kb, with the share of the sym-genes of 36.5 ± 1.5%, while for the strains lacking nodX these values were 61.7 ± 3.7 kb and 56.3 ± 1.4%, respectively (significant difference at P0 < 0.01). Syntenic structures were revealed in the symbiotic regions of strains Vaf12, UPM1131, and TOM, as well as syntenic structures of non-symbiotic regions in strains Vaf12, TOM, and WSM1689. The correlation coefficients between the matrices of genetic distances in the analyzed strains for the nodABC, nifHDK, and fixABC operons were on average 0.993 ± 0.002, while their values for the plasmid sites located between the sym-genes were considerably less (0.706 ± 0.010). In these regions, 21 to 27% of the genes were involved in amino acid transport and metabolism, which was substantially higher than the average for the genome of R. leguminosarum bv. viciae (11–12%). These data suggest that the evolution of R. leguminosarum bv. viciae, defined by narrowing of the host specificity (associated with a loss of the nodX gene), was accompanied by reduction of the regions of plasmids located between the sym-genes, as well as by specialization of these areas to perform the functions related to symbiotic nitrogen fixation. The observed increase of density in the cluster of sym-genes may be associated with intensification of their horizontal transfer in the populations of rhizobia, which determines the speed of evolution of the symbiotic system.

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