Abstract

Octasaccharide repeating-units have been isolated from the acidic polysaccharides secreted by Rhizobium trifolii strain NA30, R. trifolii strain LPR5, R. leguminosarum strain LPR1, and R. phaseoli strain LPR49. ( R. trifolii is the symbiont of clover, R. leguminosarum, of peas, and R. phaseoli, of beans). The repeating units were formed by treating the polysaccharides with an enzyme produced by a bacteriophage. The glycosyl sequence and the structures and locations of the non-glycosyl substituents were shown to be identical for repeating units derived from all of these polysaccharides, except for that derived from the polysaccharide produced by R. trifolii NA30. Therefore, the discernible structural features of the acidic polysaccharides secreted by Rhizobium species cannot be the determinant of host specificity. In support of this conclusion is the observation that R. trifolii LPR5045, produced by curing R. trifolii LPR5 of its Sym plasmid (the Sym plasmid is required for symbiosis and host specificity), secreted a polysaccharide having the same structure (including identities and locations of nonglycosyl substituents) as that of the polysaccharide secreted by its plasmid-containing parent. Thus, the structural genes that encode for synthesis of the acidic polysaccharide secreted by R. trifolii LPR5045 are not located on the Sym plasmid, and neither are the genes that encode for synthesis and attachment of non-glycosyl substituents of the polysaccharide. The possibility remains that a quantitatively minor component of the acidic polysaccharide could be a host-specific determinant.

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