Arch Microbiol (2010) 192:341–350
DOI 10.1007/s00203-010-0561-0
ORIGINAL PAPER
Insight into the evolutionary history of symbiotic genes of Robinia
pseudoacacia rhizobia deriving from Poland and Japan
Borena Mierzwa · Sylwia Wdowiak-Wróbel ·
Michai Kalita · Sebastian Gnat · Wanda Maiek
Received: 30 November 2009 / Revised: 25 January 2010 / Accepted: 2 March 2010 / Published online: 20 March 2010
Springer-Verlag 2010
Abstract The phylogeny of symbiotic genes of Robinia
pseudoacacia (black locust) rhizobia derived from Poland
and Japan was studied by comparative sequence analysis of
nodA, nodC, nodH, and nifH loci. In phylogenetic trees,
black locust symbionts formed a branch of their own suggesting that the spread and maintenance of symbiotic genes
within Robinia pseudoacacia rhizobia occurred through
vertical transmission. There was 99–100% sequence similarity for nodA genes of Robinia pseudoacacia nodulators,
97–98% for nodC, and 97–100% for nodH and nifH loci.
A considerable sequence conservation of sym genes shows
that the symbiotic apparatus of Robinia pseudoacacia rhizobia might have evolved under strong host plant constraints. In the nodA and nodC gene phylograms, Robinia
pseudoacacia rhizobia grouped with Phaseolus sp. symbionts, although they were not closely related to our isolates
based on 16S rRNA genes, and with Mesorhizobium
amorphae. nifH gene phylogeny of our isolates followed
the evolutionary history of 16S rDNA and Robinia pseudoacacia rhizobia grouped with Mesorhizobium genus species. Nodulation assays revealed that Robinia pseudoacacia
rhizobia eVectively nodulated their native host and also
Amorpha fruticosa and Amorpha californica resulting in a
signiWcant enhancement of plant growth. The black locust
root nodules are shown to be of indeterminate type.
Communicated by Ursula Priefer.
B. Mierzwa · S. Wdowiak-Wróbel · M. Kalita · S. Gnat ·
W. Maiek (&)
Department of Genetics and Microbiology,
M. Curie-Skiodowska University, Akademicka 19 St.,
20-033 Lublin, Poland
e-mail: wanda.malek@poczta.umcs.lublin.pl
Keywords Robinia pseudoacacia rhizobia ·
Phylogeny of sym genes · Nodule structure
Introduction
Soil bacteria collectively called rhizobia are able to induce
nitrogen-Wxing symbiotic association with roots of leguminous plants. An eVective symbiosis requires several bacterial genes, including nitrogen-Wxation (nif) genes that
encode nitrogenase responsible for N2 reduction and nodulation (nod) genes that encode Nod factors which trigger root
hair deformations and cortical cell divisions (Debelle et al.
2001; Perret et al. 2000). Nod factors consist of -1,4-linked
N-acetyl glucosamine oligosaccharide backbone ranging in
length from 3 to 5 residues that are substituted by an N-acyl
chain on the non-reducing end and other chemical groups on
the glucosamine residues. The backbone of the Nod factors
is synthesized under control of the common nod genes,
nodA (acyl transferase), nodB (deacetylase), and nodC
(N-acetylglucosaminyl transferase), and next it is modiWed
by diVerent chemical groups (sulfate, fucosyl) that determine
the speciWcity of rhizobium–legume interactions. The synthesis and transfer of chemical “decorations” to the backbone part of Nod factors is encoded by the host-speciWc
nodulation (hsn) genes. In addition, the common nod genes
contribute also to the bacterial host range. For example,
NodA proteins recognize and transfer only speciWc fatty
acids to the Nod core, the length of which determines NodC
protein (Debelle et al. 2001; Downie 1998). Symbiotic nod
and nif genes which are located on transmissible plasmids in
Rhizobium, Sinorhizobium, and some Mesorhiozbium species or on genomic islands in Mesorhizobium loti and
Bradyrhizobium japonicum may be transferred across divergent chromosomal lineages (González et al. 2003; Gottfert
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342
et al. 2001; Mierzwa et al. 2009; Nandasena et al. 2007;
Sullivan and Ronson 1998; Xu and Murooka 1995; Zhang
et al. 2008; Zou et al. 1997). It was shown for agricultural
rhizobial populations (Laguerre et al. 1996; Sullivan et al.
1995) and concluded by discordance between the genealogies
of nod and housekeeping loci (Laguerre et al. 2001; Suominen
et al. 2001; Vinuesa et al. 2005a; Young and Haukka 1996).
Such gene transfer may adopt rhizobial populations to new
host plant and enable symbionts with the same genetic background but diVerent nod genes to nodulate distinct legumes
as it was found for R. leguminosarum forming symbiosis
with Viciae, Trifolium, and Phaseoli species plants (Martínez
et al. 1990). By contrast to nod genes, the phylogeny of nifH
genes, which encode dinitrogenase reductase, was reported
to be congruent with 16S rDNA phylogeny (Hennecke et al.
1985; Wdowiak-Wróbel and Maiek 2010; Young 1992;
Zhang et al. 2008); however, in some cases, it followed that
of nodA genes (Haukka et al. 1998; Laguerre et al. 2001;
Vinuesa et al. 2005a, b).
Symbiotic promiscuity of R. pseudoacacia was examined by Han et al. (Han et al. 2008), Ulrich and Zaspel
(Ulrich and Zaspel 2000), Wei et al. (Wei et al. 2009) and
Mierzwa et al. (Mierzwa et al. 2009). Those studies showed
black locust to be nodulated by Rhizobium, Sinorhizobium,
and Mesorhizobium genera bacteria, however, the latter
ones clearly predominated in root nodules. Despite taxonomic diversity, R. pseudoacacia rhizobia from North
America, Germany, and China shared very similar
sequences of nodA, nodC, and nifH genes (Wei et al. 2009).
According to Wei et al. (Wei et al. 2009), local rhizobia
from China were adopted to symbiosis with black locust by
lateral transfer of nod genes from R. pseudoacacia nodulators derived from North America where this plant is native.
In this paper, we present the phylogeny of symbiotic
nodA, nodC, nodH, and nifH genes of R. pseudoacacia rhizobia derived from Poland and Japan and microscopic
structure of black locust root nodules.
Arch Microbiol (2010) 192:341–350
PCR ampliWcation and sequencing of amplicons
For each R. pseudoacacia nodulator, total genomic DNA
was isolated, as described previously (Mierzwa et al. 2009),
and used as PCR template. PCRs were performed with the
ReadyMixTMTaq kit according to the manufacturer’s
recommendations (Sigma). The 660-bp fragment of nodA
gene was ampliWed and sequenced using forward primer
nodA-1 (5⬘-TGCRGTGGAARNTRNNCTGGGAAA-3⬘)
and reverse one nodA-2 (5⬘-GGNCCGTCRTCRAAWGT
CARGTA-3⬘) according to the procedure described by
Haukka et al. (Haukka et al. 1998). The nodC gene
sequences were ampliWed and sequenced with forward
primer nodCFu (5⬘-AYGTHGTYGAYGACGGITC-3⬘) and
reverse primer nodCI (5⬘-CGYGACAGCCANTCKCTA
TTG-3⬘) corresponding to the position 251–269 bp and
1160–1181 bp of nodC gene of R. leguminosarum bv.
viciae, respectively. PCR was performed using the same
cycling parameters as reported for this gene by Laguerre
et al. (Laguerre et al. 2001). The 567-bp fragment of nodH
gene was ampliWed and sequenced with forward primer
TSnodH1 (5⬘-VTKGAGYAACGGTGARYTGCTCA-3⬘)
and reverse one TSnodH2 (5⬘-GCGAAGTGAWSCCGCA
ACTC-3⬘) under the following conditions: preheating at
95°C for 2 min; 35 cycles of denaturing at 95°C for 45 s,
annealing at 53°C for 30 s, and extension at 72°C for 2 min;
and a Wnal extension at 72°C for 7 min. A large »780-bp
long fragment of nifH gene was ampliWed and sequenced
with primers NifH1 (5⬘-CGTTTTACGGCAAGGGCGG-3⬘)
and NifH2 (5⬘-TCCTCCAGCTCCTCCATGGT-3⬘). nifH
sequences were ampliWed following the procedure described
by Perret and Broughton (1998). PCR products were puriWed by using Montage PCR Filter Units (Millipore, Massachusetts, USA) as recommended by the manufacturer.
Sequencing reactions were performed with the ABI Prism
BigDye Terminator Cycle sequence kit (Applied Biosystems model 310 DNA sequencer). Sequences were deposited
in the GenBank database under accession numbers listed in
the phylograms.
Materials and methods
Sequence analyses
Bacterial strains and growth conditions
For phylogenetic analysis of R. pseudoacacia rhizobium
symbiotic genes, the following nodule isolates were chosen: RPP14, RPP20 (from Poland), RPJ3, RPJ5, RPJ6, and
RPJ16 (from Japan; Mierzwa et al. 2009). Additionally,
these strains and 16 other black locust rhizobia described in
the paper of Mierzwa et al. (Mierzwa et al. 2009) were used
in plant tests in order to determine their host range and the
eVectiveness of N2 Wxation. Rhizobium strains were maintained and grown on yeast extract-mannitol medium
(YEM) as described earlier (Mierzwa et al. 2009).
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Multiple sequence alignments were generated using
ClustalX (Thompson et al. 1997) and manually corrected
using GeneDoc software (Nicholas and Nicholas 1997).
Phylogenetic trees were generated by maximum likelihood
(ML) approach using PhyML 3.0 and the nucleotide
substitution model selected by the Akaike information criterion, as implemented in MODELTEST3.6 (Posada and
Crondall 1998). Robustness of tree nods was estimated by
bootstrap analysis with 100 replicates of each sequence
using PhyML. The trees were displayed by using TreeView
(Page 1996).
Arch Microbiol (2010) 192:341–350
Plant tests
R. pseudoacacia microsymbionts were tested for symbiotic
interactions with their original host plant (R. pseudoacacia), Trifolium repens, Lotus corniculatus, Medicago
sativa, Ornithopus sativus, Phaseolus vulgaris, Glycine
max, Astragalus glycyphyllos, Astragalus sinicus, Vicia
sativa, Lupinus luteus, Amorpha fruticosa, and Amorpha
californica. Seeds of legumes were surface-sterilized, germinated, and plants inoculated with bacterial suspension
were grown in nitrogen-free Hoagland’s medium as
described by Mierzwa et al. (Mierzwa et al. 2009). For each
legume species–rhizobium interaction (ten strains from
Poland and ten strains from Japan), three replicates were
prepared. The symbiotic properties of R. pseudoacacia
nodulators were assessed by the presence of nodules, shoot
dry weight, and the acetylene-reducing activity (Turner and
Gibson 1980). Non-inoculated plants were used as negative
controls.
Light and electron microscopy
For the microscopy studies, a whole root nodules sampled
14, 28 days after inoculation (DAI), and nodule fragments
sampled 91 DAI were Wxed in a mixture of 2.5% glutaraldehyde and 2% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M Na-cacodylate
buVer, pH 7.2, for 2 h under air pressure of ¡0.06 MPa at
room temperature. Next, the samples were treated as
described earlier (Kalita et al. 2006), embedded in glycid
ether 100 epoxy resin (SERVA), and the resin was polymerized at 60°C for 24 h according to the manufacturer’s
formula. Serial resin sections 2–4 m thick (depending on
the nodule size) and ultra-thin sections were cut and treated
as described by Kalita et al. (Kalita et al. 2006). The anatomical observations and micrographs were done using
light microscope Provis AX (Olympus) equipped with digital photo camera. The ultrastructure was observed under
transmission electron microscope Morgagni 268 (FEI Company) operating at 80 kV. The images were adjusted using
“Levels” or “Curves” tools in Photoshop 7.0 CE (Adobe)
software.
Results
Phylogeny of symbiotic genes of R. pseudoacacia rhizobia
The R. pseudoacacia microsymbionts, two from Poland
and four from Japan which represented three diVerent phenogroups (Mierzwa et al. 2009), were studied for the phylogeny of their symbiotic loci by comparative analysis of
nodulation nodA, nodC, nodH, and dinitrogenase reductase
nifH genes. These genes have been widely used in studies
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of symbiosis genealogy in rhizobia. nodA PCR ampliWcation with nodA-1, nodA-2 primers yielded a single band of
about 600-bp. ML analysis of 437-bp nodA sequences of
black locust rhizobia derived from Poland and Japan (this
study) and China, Germany, and North America (present in
the GenGank database), as well as other nodule bacteria, is
shown in Fig. 1. The best-Wt model selected by Akaike
Information Criterion (AIC) was Tamura-Nei (TrN + I + G).
All R. pseudoacacia rhizobia of nodA sequence identity
99–100% were grouped together with 100% bootstrap
support (BS) and in bigger highly validated monophyletic
cluster (98% BS) with R. giardini bv. giardini, R. gallicum
bv. gallicum, R. tropici (symbionts of Phaseoli sp.), and
M. amorphae (symbiont of Amorphae fruticosa) as a basal
bifurcation. NodA sequence similarities of these bacteria and
black locust rhizobia ranged from 73 to 79%. Other rhizobia,
with 57–73% nodA sequence identities to R. pseudoacacia
nodule isolates, formed four clearly separated lineages. On
the outskirt of this tree, A. caulinodans (57% sequence
similarity) was located.
Next, we concentrated on nodC gene evolutionary history. Phylogenetic analysis was carried out on 837-bp
nodC fragment ampliWed and sequenced in all six tested
R. pseudoacacia microsymbionts (data not presented) and on a
shorter 419-bp segment when black locust rhizobia from
Germany, China, and the USA (GenGank database) were
included into studies (Fig. 2). ML approach to nodC gene
phylogeny gave in both cases very similar tree topologies in
TrN + I + G model selected by AIC. R. pseudoacacia rhizobia from Poland, Japan, China, Germany, and North
America, with 97–98% nodC nucleotide identities, formed
monophyletic branch together with M. amorphae, R. gallicum bv. gallicum, R. giardinii bv. giardinii, R. gallicum bv.
phaseoli, and R. etli (76–82% sequence similarity) which
splits in two well-supported major clusters. One of them
contains nine black locust rhizobia and M. amorphae, the
second one harbors bean endosymbionts (Fig. 2). At the
basal position of this clade, Mesorhizobium sp. (Oxytropis)
N33, M. septentrionale, and M. temperatum were situated.
In respect to nodC sequences of the tested rhizobia, they
showed diVerences in 17–21% nucleotides. Other rhizobia
which displayed 55–77% nodC nucleotide sequence similarity to black locust isolates spread into Wve clearly
resolved lineages with A. caulinodans as outlier (55% identical nucleotides).
To uncover the phylogeny of dinitrogen reductase of
R. pseudoacacia microsymbionts, we ampliWed and
sequenced the 689-bp fragments of nifH genes in all six
tested rhizobia. Phylogenetic analysis was carried out on
the whole this amplicon and its 469-bp segment when black
locust rhizobia from China, Germany, and North America
(GenGank database) were included into studies. Both nifH
phylograms, obtained under the best-Wt General Time
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Fig. 1 Phylogenetic ML tree based on 437-bp nucleotide sequences
of the nodA genes of R. pseudoacacia nodule isolates (shown in bold)
and reference rhizobial strains. Only bootstrap probability values
of ¸ 70% (for 100 pseudoreplicates) are indicated at the branching
points. The scale bar indicates the number of substitutions per site.
GenBank accession numbers are shown in parentheses
Reversible model of sequence evolution (GTR + I + G)
have a very similar topology. Only the tree for shorter nifH
gene fragment is presented in Fig. 3. All R. pseudoacacia
rhizobia from Europe, Asia, and North America with 97–
100% nifH sequence identity to each other lied in the same
clade in 98% of bootstrap replicates. They grouped with
Mesorhizobium species (except M. loti) within wellresolved clade and shared with them 88–94% nifH
sequence identity. Outside this clade, on the sister branch,
M. loti along with R. tropici was positioned. nifH sequences
from these bacteria and black locust endosymbionts
revealed identity from 89 to 92%. Other rhizobia were
placed in three clearly resolved clusters and one single
strain lineage (R. etli). Bradyrhizobium species and A. caulinodans formed a highly validated, well-resolved cluster at
the basal position of the corresponding tree. All these bac-
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Arch Microbiol (2010) 192:341–350
Fig. 2 ML phylogram based on 419-bp nucleotide sequences of the
nodC genes of R. pseudoacacia nodule isolates (shown in bold) and
reference rhizobial strains. Bootstrap values of ¸70% (for 100 pseudoreplicates) are indicated at the corresponding nodes. The scale bar
indicates the number of substitutions per site. GenBank accession
numbers are shown in parentheses
teria diVered from the tested R. pseudoacacia microsymbionts at 29–10% nifH sequences.
In our studies on symbiotic genes of R. pseudoacacia
microsymbionts, we also focused on the nodH host-speciWcity genes involved in transfer of activated sulfate from
3⬘-phosphoadenosine 5⬘-phosphosulfate (PAPS) to the Nod
factor core structure (Debelle et al. 2001; Perret et al.
2000). Five hundred and sixty-Wve–base pair fragment of
nodH gene was ampliWed and sequenced in all six tested
strains. The nucleotide identity for nodH genes among
black locust rhizobia was 97–100%. Phylogenetic analysis
of nodH partial sequences with best-Wt Hasegawa-KishinoYano model (HKY + G) of nucleotide substitution resulted
in ML tree presented in Fig. 4. R. pseudoacacia nodule
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Fig. 4 ML phylogram based on 565-bp nucleotide sequences of the
nodH genes of R. pseudoacacia nodule isolates (shown in bold) and
reference rhizobial strains. Bootstrap values of ¸70% (for 100 pseudoreplicates) are indicated at the corresponding nodes. The scale bar
indicates the number of substitutions per site. GenBank accession
numbers are shown in parentheses
were positioned with 68 and 66% sequence similarity,
respectively.
Host plant associations
Fig. 3 Phylogenetic ML tree based on 469-bp nucleotide sequences
of the nifH genes of R. pseudoacacia nodule isolates (shown in bold)
and reference rhizobial strains. Only bootstrap probability values
of ¸70% (for 100 pseudoreplicates) are indicated at the branching
points. The scale bar indicates the number of substitutions per site.
GenBank accession numbers are shown in parentheses
isolates from Poland and Japan clustered together at 100%
bootstrap support and they grouped well with Mesorhizobium sp. (Oxytropis arctobia) N33 strain (80–81%
sequence identity) and Sinorhizobium sp. BR816 (77%
identity), suggesting that they might have been of monophyletic origin. The nucleotide sequence similarity of nodH
R. pseudoacacia rhizobia, and Methylobacterium nodulans
was 75–76%. Compared with the nodH sequences of Sinorhizobium meliloti strains and Rhizobium sp. LPU83, our
isolates indicated a lower percentage of identical nucleotides, i.e., in the range from 73 to 74%. On the outskirts of
nodH gene tree, R. tropici and Burkholderia phymatum
R. pseudoacacia microsymbionts derived from Poland and
Japan were able to form nitrogen-Wxing symbiosis not only
with the host from which they were isolated but also with
A. fruticosa and A. californica. None of our isolates nodulated: Trifolium repens, Lotus corniculatus, Medicago
sativa, Ornithopus sativus, Phaseolus vulgaris, Glycine
max, Vicia sativa, Lupinus luteus, Astragalus cicer, Astragalus glycyphyllos, and Astragalus sinicus (Mierzwa et al.
2009). After 6 weeks postinoculation, the dry matter of
green parts of nodulated legumes was 2–3 times higher than
that of uninoculated ones showing that the used bacteria Wx
N2 and supply it to the symbiotic partner (Table 1). Symbiotic interactions between the tested rhizobia and R. pseudoacacia, A. fruticosa, and A. californica were also evaluated
for nitrogenase activity by the acetylene reduction test. The
highest level of enzyme activity R. pseudoacacia rhizobia
showed in association with their original host, and next in
descending sequence with A. fruticosa and A. californica,
although these bacteria were good diazotrophs in symbiosis
with all three legumes (Table 1).
Microscopic structure of R. pseudoacacia root nodules
The root nodules of R. pseudoacacia were initiated within
deep layers of root primary cortex and became infected via
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Arch Microbiol (2010) 192:341–350
Table 1 Nitrogen-Wxing activity of Robinia pseudoacacia rhizobia in
symbiosis with diVerent legumes
Host plant for
Robinia pseudoacacia
nodule isolates
Robinia pseudoacacia
Amorpha fruticosa
Amorpha californica
Symbiotic eVectiveness
Shoot dry
weight
(mg/plant)
Nitrogenase
activity (nmol
ethylene/h/plant)
Averagea
SD
Averagea
SD
28.8
3.7
625.7
46.6
NC 11.2
1.7
NT
13.9
1.8
410.4
NC 5.6
0.8
NT
11.9
1.7
325.8
NC 4.9
0.7
NT
29.3
27.4
SD standard deviation, NC negative control (uninoculated plant), NT
not tested (uninoculated plants were not checked for acetylene reduction)
a
The values are the mean of 60 plants inoculated separately with 20
strains (ten from each geographic region), in three replicates
an infection thread originating from the curled root hair. Up
to 28–35 DAI, the root nodules were round with two
strands of loose parenchyma on their surface (data not
shown). Later, the nodules took an elongate shape (Fig. 5),
and among 91 DAI nodules, bifurcated ones were found.
Microscope observations proved the root nodules of R.
pseudoacacia to be of indeterminate type, with persistent
apical meristem, bacteroid tissue consisting of infected and
uninfected cells and multilayered nodule cortex with a system of vascular bundles (Fig. 5). Within the bacteroid tissue, the following developmental zones were discernible:
(1) infection thread penetration zone, (2) symbiosome multiplication zone, (3) diVerentiated zone, (4) senescent zone,
and (5) saprophytic zone. The nodule meristem was
Fig. 5 Anatomy of Robinia pseudoacacia root nodules, 91 DAI. The
approximate boundaries of developmental zones are marked with thin
arrows. NM nodule meristem, ITP infection thread penetration zone,
DZ diVerentiating zone, DBT diVerentiated bacteroid tissue, SBT
senescent bacteroid tissue, SAZ saprophytic (= saprotrophic) zone, OC
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narrow. Electron-dense precipitate or globules were
observed in vacuoles. The organelles were relatively sparse
and the plastids contained small starch grains. In 91 DAI
nodules, the plastids within the nodule meristem, as well as
the infection thread penetration zone, accumulated large
amounts of ferritin (Fig. 6 and the insert). The infection
threads, within the whole bacteroid tissue, contained a nontypical electron-empty layer between the infection thread
wall and matrix. Starch accumulation was evident in the
non-infected cells of diVerentiating bacteroid tissue, while
in the infected cells, starch grains were small or not evident.
In the infected cells of diVerentiated bacteroid tissue, a
large vacuole occurred at the centrally positioned nucleus
(Fig. 7 and the insert). Plastids were devoid of starch
grains. Together with mitochondria, they formed tight clusters at the intercellular spaces. Several bacteroids were
observed in some symbiosomes.
The senescence of bacteroid tissue-infected cells started
with widening of peribacteroid space and fusion of symbiosomes (data not shown). In some symbiosomes, the peribacteroid membrane fused with the tonoplast. In such
cases, the vacuolar lytic system could participate in the
degradation of bacteroids, but most bacteroids were
degraded within their symbiosomes. The degradation of the
host organellae followed the degradation of symbiosomes.
The infection thread wall became visibly loosened. In the
non-infected cells, the size of starch grains increased, the
vacuoles decreased, but the cytoplasm loose its density.
After the infected cell’s degradation was complete, some
of the dead cells became populated by large number of rhizobia (Fig. 5), which released themselves from infection
threads and never started the transformation into bacteroids.
Such colonies of saprotrophic rhizobia were present also
within numerous intercellular spaces.
outer cortex, IC inner cortex, white and black asterisks—infected and
non-infected cells in the bacteroid tissue, respectively, arrowheads—
cortical endodermis, double arrowheads—vascular bundle, arrow—
cell of the meristemoid producing the “periderm”. Bar 600 m
Arch Microbiol (2010) 192:341–350
Fig. 6 Ultrastructure of infected cell from the infection thread penetration zone in Robinia pseudoacacia root nodules. N cell nucleus, V
vacuole (note the electron-dense material), thin arrow—infection
thread wall, double arrow—electron-empty layer between the infection thread wall and thread matrix, double arrowhead—rhizobium cell
to be released from the infection thread, black asterisks—mitochondria, white asterisks—plastids, white arrowhead—a plastid with heavy
accumulation of ferritin (shown enlarged in the insert). Bars 5 m and
0.2 m, respectively
Within the nodule cortex of young nodules, three typical
layers were diVerentiated (Fig. 5): the multilayered inner
cortex with the boundary layer, the monolayered cortical
endodermis, and the outer cortex of loose parenchyma. In
some parts of the older nodules, the inner cortex cells
adjoining the cortical endodermis dediVerentiated and
formed meristemoids that produced parenchymatous cells
in regular Wles, resembling the arrangement of periderm
cells (Fig. 5).
Discussion
R. pseudoacacia rhizobia originating from Poland and
Japan, which were identiWed as Mesorhizobium genus bacteria by phenotypic, genomic, and 16S rDNA phylogenetic
analyses (Mierzwa et al. 2009), were now studied for evolutionary history of nodulation (nodA, nodC, nodH) and
nitrogen-Wxation (nifH) genes. The products of all these
symbiotic genes have well-deWned functions. The NodA
determines the type of N-acyl substitution of the Nod factor
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Fig. 7 Ultrastructure of diVerentiated bacteroid tissue in Robinia
pseudoacacia root nodules. IS intercellular space, N cell nucleus, NIC
non-infected cells of the bacteroid tissue, S symbiosomes, V vacuole
with a Wne-Wbrillar material, black asterisks in insert—mitochondria,
white asterisks in insert—plastids (note the close arrangement of plastids and mitochondria and their positioning at the IS), arrowheads—
starch grains in NIC’s amyloplasts. Bars10 m and 2 m, respectively
and therefore it plays a crucial role in host plant recognition; NodC controls the length of chitin oligosaccharide in
Nod factor biosynthesis, NodH is the host range determinant and catalyzes the transfer of sulfate from PAPS to Nod
factor, and NifH is the Fe–S protein subunit of nitrogenase
(Debelle et al. 2001; Perret et al. 2000). Phylogenetic analysis of both nodA and nodC sequences of R. pseudoacacia
rhizobia provided compelling evidence for their monophyletic origin and a strong support for the hypothesis that
these bacteria form a sister lineage to Phaseolus sp. symbionts known to be taxonomically distant and to M. amorphae, symbiont of Amorpha fruticosa (Figs. 1, 2). We also
suggest that these bacteria inherit nod genes from their
common ancestor. Black locust rhizobia studied in this
work as well as those from China, Germany, and North
America have very similar or even identical nod sequences
without mosaicism and without biogeographic patterns
(Figs. 1, 2). The clustering of all R. pseudoacacia rhizobia
in a single, tight clade of their own may suggest that dissemination of nod genes within R. pseudoacacia rhizobia
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348
lineage occurred mainly through vertical transmission and
that lateral transfer of nod genes between these bacteria and
other rhizobia is rather a rare event. We also suggest that an
extremely low rate of nodA and nodC divergence noted for
black locust symbionts is required to their proper function
in symbiotic association with the host plant and that plant
strongly aVected evolution of common nod genes by selecting against changes preventing host nodulation. Several rhizobiologists discussed the role of leguminous plant as the
key evolutionary force that provides cohesion to rhizobia
by structuring of nodulation genes (Aguilar et al. 2004;
Bena et al. 2005; Wernegreen and Riley 1999). Bipartition
separating R. pseudoacacia symbionts and those of A. fruticosa (nodC gene tree) and Phaseolus sp. (nodA tree) may
correspond to speciation events that guarantee optimal
cooperation of both symbiotic partners. Extreme divergence of nodA and nodC sequences of Azorhizobium caulinodans in relation to those of the tested rhizobia that form
stem and root symbiosis with plants of the same tribe Robinieae, i.e., Sesbania sp. and Robinia pseudoacacia, respectively (Perret et al. 2000), allows us to hypothesize that
stem nodulation requires a speciWc adaptation of nod genes
controlled by leguminous host.
R. pseudoacacia rhizobia were found to harbor nodH
genes suggesting that these bacteria produce Nod molecules that bear a sulfate, although the functionality of these
genes was not proved for them. The almost identical nodH
sequences of black locust rhizobia are the most similar to
the corresponding genes of Mesorhizobium sp. (Oxytropis
arctobia) N33 and Sinorhizobium sp. BR816 strains. On the
nodH gene tree, all these bacteria grouped together in a single clade (Fig. 4) suggesting that their nodH genes have a
common evolutionary history. The inferred phylogeny
seems to be not reliable due to a very low number of nodH
sequences available and included into this study. Sulfation
of Nod signal molecules was demonstrated in several rhizobium species. For the Wrst time in S. meliloti, where it is
required for alfalfa nodulation (Lerouge et al. 1990), and
subsequently in Mesorhizobium sp. (Oxytropis arctobia)
N33 which forms nodules on both arctic and temperate
legumes such as Astragalus, Onobrychis, and Oxytropis
species (Debelle et al. 2001), R. tropici, a broad host range
bacterium that is able to nodulate Phaseolus vulgaris,
Macroptilium atropurpureum, and Leucaena leucocephala
(Poupot et al. 1993), M. huakuii, symbiont of Astragalus
sinicus (Yang et al. 1999), Sinorhizobium sp. BR816, a
heat-tolerant tropical strain isolated from Leucaena leucocephala that also nodulate common bean (Laeremans et al.
1997), and Methylobacter nodulans ORS 2060, symbiont
of Crotalaria podocarpa (Renier et al. 2007).
In this work, we generated also nifH sequences of the
tested R. pseudoacacia rhizobia and studied their evolutionary history. Analysis revealed that R. pseudoacacia is
123
Arch Microbiol (2010) 192:341–350
nodulated by rhizobia with very similar nifH genes despite
the fact that some were from Poland and some from Japan.
In the nifH tree (Fig. 3), black locust symbionts formed its
own highly supported lineage associated with Mesorhizobium species in a robust, monophyletic cluster reXecting
that nitrogenase Fe–S proteins of these bacteria have a
common evolutionary history. The observed clustering of
R. pseudoacacia rhizobia was congruent with that expected
from the previous work on 16S rDNA phylogeny (Mierzwa
et al. 2009) and compatible with the view of many authors
that nifH gene phylogeny closely follows 16S rDNA evolutionary history (Hennecke et al. 1985; Wdowiak-Wróbel
and Maiek 2010; Zhang et al. 2008). The common evolutionary patterns of nifH and 16S rRNA genes and tight clustering of R. pseudoacacia rhizobia on its own branch may
suggest that nifH genes of these bacteria require for optimal
functioning a correct chromosomal background and that
they evolved to a large degree parallelly with bacteria
which carry them without a signiWcant gene exchange with
other bacteria.
In conclusion, the results from molecular analysis of
symbiotic genes of R. pseudoacacia rhizobia suggest that:
(1) common nod and nifH genes have independent evolutionary histories, i.e., nifH genes evolved to a large degree
in a similar fashion as the bacteria that carry them, whereas
the nodA and nodC gene phylogeny did not follow that of
the core genes, (2) the studied symbiotic genes are well
conserved, and (3) sym gene inheritance seems to be dominated by vertical descent.
Nod metabolites, encoded by common and host speciWcity nodulation genes of rhizobia, are key molecules in eliciting nodules in legume roots/or stems (Perret et al. 2000).
Rhizobia vary signiWcantly in their nodulation speciWcity.
Some of them nodulate only a particular leguminous plants
as for example R. leguminosarum bv. trifolii that forms
symbiosis with Trifolium sp., and others are promiscuous
and infect plants from various tribes and even various subfamilies as, for example, Rhizobium sp. NGR234 that
infects 232 legume species of 112 genera tested and even
forms nodules on non-legume Parasponia andersonii
belonging to Ulmaceae family (Pueppke and Broughton
1999).
Microsymbionts of R. pseudoacacia represent a
restricted range of host speciWcity. They were fastidious in
the their choice of a symbiotic partner and formed eVective
associations with the host from which they were isolated
but also with plants of Amorpha genus, i.e., A. fruticosa and
A. californica (Table 1). It is worth noting that vice versa
A. fruticosa also formed N2-Wxing associations with
R. pseudoacacia (data not presented).
Root nodules of the tribe Robinieae are generally of
indeterminate type (Sprent 2001), although morphologically determinate nodules are also reported (Corby 1988).
Arch Microbiol (2010) 192:341–350
Here, it is conWrmed in R. pseudoacacia. In this species,
young nodules, if not examined in serial anatomical sections, may be mistaken for determinate ones due to their
spherical shape together with the characteristic “lenticels”
(data not shown). However, the older nodules developed a
cylindrical shape typical for indeterminate nodules (Fig. 5).
Also, as showed our observations under the light microscope (Fig. 5), the general anatomy of R. pseudoacacia
nodules is similar to the well-studied indeterminate nodules
of Medicago sp. (Timmers et al. 2000; Vasse et al. 1990)
and e.g., Trifolium sp. (Gotocka et al. 1997). However, at
the level of ultrastructure, some traits are observed that are
speciWc for R. pseudoacacia nodules (data not shown).
Among them, the most signiWcant seems to be the absence
of the II/III interzone at the proximal face of the diVerentiating bacteroid tissue. In the II/III interzone, as described
by Vasse et al. (Vasse et al. 1990) in Medicago sp. and later
observed in the other genera, the amyloplasts of the
infected cells are positioned at the intercellular spaces and
they rapidly accumulated especially large starch grains. In
our work on R. pseudoacacia, very little or none starch was
observed in the infected cell plastids (Figs. 6, 7), also at
their late diVerentiation stage, and thus no II/III interzone
can be discerned in the nodules of this species.
Acknowledgments This work was supported by the grant from
Ministry of Science and Higher Education No N303 057 32/1922. We
also thank Ewa Znojek for expert technical assistance in microscopic
studies.
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