Abstracts
Variation in rhizobia strains isn’t a desirable fact based mainly on the possibility of unexpected results on legume inoculation. In this work, we studied the variability on phenotypic characteristics and genetic stability of rhizobia strains recommended for soybean inoculation. Variants with stable colony morphology were obtained from Bradyrhizobium japonicum strain SEMIA 5080 and from B. elkanii SEMIA 5019. Variants from SEMIA 587 obtained by another author were also used. The variants differed on colony characteristics, nodulation capacity, nitrogen fixation efficiency and competitive ability for nodule formation in two soybean varieties (Jacui 7 and IAS 5). Symbiotic behavior varied according to plant variety. Only the variants 5019 G and 5019 P differed on the isoenzymatic profile. There were differences in antibiotic resistance between variants from two strains. Correlation between symbiotic characteristics and colony morphology or antibiotic resistance wasn’t conclusive. The results indicate that the variability in rhizobia strains might be an important factor to be considered in strain selection and preservation of cultures for inoculant production.
variants isolation; inoculant production; isoenzymes
Variantes em estirpes de rizóbio usadas na produção de inoculantes não são desejáveis e podem propiciar resultados inesperados na inoculação da leguminosa. Estudou-se a variabilidade nas características fenotípicas e a estabilidade genética das estirpes de Bradyrizobium recomendadas para a inoculação em soja. Foram isolados variantes com morfologia colonial estável das estirpes SEMIA 5080 de Bradyrhizobium japonicum e SEMIA 5019 de B. elkanii. Variantes da estirpe SEMIA 587, obtidas por outro autor, também foram estudadas. As variantes diferiram nas características coloniais, capacidade de nodulação, eficiência na fixação de nitrogênio, e competitividade para formação de nódulos em duas variedades de soja (Jacui 7 e IAS 5). O comportamento simbiótico das variantes diferiu de acordo com as variedades onde foram inoculadas. Somente as variantes 5019 G e 5019 P, originadas da estirpe SEMIA 5019, diferiram quanto ao perfil isoenzimático. Observou-se diferenças na resistência a antibióticos entre as variantes das duas estirpes. Análises relacionando as características simbióticas com morfologia colonial ou resistência a antibióticos não foram conclusivas. A variabilidade em estirpes de rizóbio pode ser um fator importante a ser considerado nos programas de seleção de estirpes e no monitoramento da preservação das culturas bacterianas para a produção de inoculantes.
isolamento de variantes; produção de inoculantes; isoenzymas
PAPERS
BIOLOGY
Marcia de Vargas KoberI; Enilson Luiz Saccol de SáII,1 1 Author for correspondence. ; João Ruy Jardim FreireII; Adriana GiongoIII
IBiologist, MSc, Course of Biology, Universidade Luterana do Brasil, (ULBRA)
IIEngenheiro Agrônomo, Doctor, Department of Soil Science, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, (UFRGS), CP 776 90001-970, Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil. E-mail: enilson.sa@ufrgs.br
IIIBiologist, Master of Science Student, Course of Microbiologia Agrícola e do Ambiente, Department of Soil Science, UFRGS
ABSTRACT
Variation in rhizobia strains isnt a desirable fact based mainly on the possibility of unexpected results on legume inoculation. In this work, we studied the variability on phenotypic characteristics and genetic stability of rhizobia strains recommended for soybean inoculation. Variants with stable colony morphology were obtained from Bradyrhizobium japonicum strain SEMIA 5080 and from B. elkanii SEMIA 5019. Variants from SEMIA 587 obtained by another author were also used. The variants differed on colony characteristics, nodulation capacity, nitrogen fixation efficiency and competitive ability for nodule formation in two soybean varieties (Jacui 7 and IAS 5). Symbiotic behavior varied according to plant variety. Only the variants 5019 G and 5019 P differed on the isoenzymatic profile. There were differences in antibiotic resistance between variants from two strains. Correlation between symbiotic characteristics and colony morphology or antibiotic resistance wasnt conclusive. The results indicate that the variability in rhizobia strains might be an important factor to be considered in strain selection and preservation of cultures for inoculant production.
Key words: variants isolation, inoculant production, isoenzymes.
RESUMO
Variantes em estirpes de rizóbio usadas na produção de inoculantes não são desejáveis e podem propiciar resultados inesperados na inoculação da leguminosa. Estudou-se a variabilidade nas características fenotípicas e a estabilidade genética das estirpes de Bradyrizobium recomendadas para a inoculação em soja. Foram isolados variantes com morfologia colonial estável das estirpes SEMIA 5080 de Bradyrhizobium japonicum e SEMIA 5019 de B. elkanii. Variantes da estirpe SEMIA 587, obtidas por outro autor, também foram estudadas. As variantes diferiram nas características coloniais, capacidade de nodulação, eficiência na fixação de nitrogênio, e competitividade para formação de nódulos em duas variedades de soja (Jacui 7 e IAS 5). O comportamento simbiótico das variantes diferiu de acordo com as variedades onde foram inoculadas. Somente as variantes 5019 G e 5019 P, originadas da estirpe SEMIA 5019, diferiram quanto ao perfil isoenzimático. Observou-se diferenças na resistência a antibióticos entre as variantes das duas estirpes. Análises relacionando as características simbióticas com morfologia colonial ou resistência a antibióticos não foram conclusivas. A variabilidade em estirpes de rizóbio pode ser um fator importante a ser considerado nos programas de seleção de estirpes e no monitoramento da preservação das culturas bacterianas para a produção de inoculantes.
Palavras-chaves: isolamento de variantes, produção de inoculantes, isoenzymas.
INTRODUCTION
The rapid reproduction of bacteria allows the abundant appearance of variants in the natural environment or in artificial culture. In cultures of the bacteria of legume symbionts, such as Bradyrhizobium spp., the variations may result in changes of cultural, biochemical or symbiotic characteristics (MEYER & PUEPPKE, 1980). Routine serological methods cannot differentiate these variants. Variants with superior symbiotic efficiency may also occur (SANTOS, 1999) and this possibility is of interest for the selection of strains and improvement of the quality of legume inoculants (SATO, 1995).
Tests of rhizobiotoxin production (FUHRMANN, 1990), analysis of the polymorphism of restriction fragment length (RFLP) and sequencing of the 16S fraction of rRNA of B. japonicum led to a proposal for the establishment of the new species of B. elkanii (KUYKENDALL et al., 1992). The strains SEMIA 587 and SEMIA 5019 have characteristics of this new species (RUMJANEK et al., 1993; LEMOS, 1994), while the strains SEMIA 5080 and SEMIA 5079 have characteristics of B. japonicum. These four strains are recommended for the production of soybean inoculants in Brazil.
Some variants in colony morphology may be stable even after several generations, passage in plants, subculture or preservation by lyophilization. Stable variants obtained from strain SEMIA 587, after lyophilization, showed changes in carbohydrate fermentation, resistance to antibiotics and efficiency in N2 fixation, but not in antigenic characteristics and a-esterase profile (SATO, 1995). The differences in colony morphology can be related to the type and amount of exopolisaccharide. Large mucoid (LM) and dry small (SD) colonies would be linked to DNA homology groups I and II, while strains in group III form large gummy colonies (LW) (FUHRMANN, 1990; BASIT et al., 1991).
Resistance to antibiotics may be used to characterize different strains. An interrelationship between colony morphology and resistance to antibiotics was reported (SINCLAIR & EAGLESHAM, 1984). However, that resistance is a characteristic of each strain or variant (RODRIGUEZ et al., 1987).
Electrophoretic analysis of isoenzymes has been also used to detect changes in aminoacid composition (SELANDER et al., 1986) and thus differentiate between serogroups and detect mutants.
Variations in competitive ability between strains in a multi-strain inoculant or between variants of the same strain in a single strain inoculant could cause problems in rhizobia inoculant quality. FRANKENBERG et al., (1995) found that strain SEMIA 587 out performed strain SEMIA 5019 in growth in culture broth and peat inoculant, in nodulation and in the efficiency of N2 fixation in soybeans. Also, necrosis of the central tissue of nodules induced by some mutants was reported (FERRAIOLI, 2002), an unusual characteristic even in nodules by Fix (-) mutants.
In the selection of strains for legume inoculation the objective is to obtain strains with desirable symbiotic characteristics, including high nitrogen fixation, competitiveness for nodule formation and genetic stability. There are some prospects of using nodulation mutants in developing grain legume cultivars that combine high yield with high residual nitrogen for developing sustainable cropping systems (BHATIA, 2001). The objective of this work was to evaluate the genetic stability of three strains recommended for soybean inoculation.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
The work was carried out with cultures of Bradyrhizobium japonicum strain SEMIA 5080 and with Bradyrhizobium elkanii strain SEMIA 5019, obtained in lyophilised form from the Culture Collection of Rhizobia of the Foundation of Agriculture Research of Rio Grande do Sul (FEPAGRO), and with variants 587 P2 and 587 P7 of B. elkanii, strain SEMIA 587, obtained by SATO (1995).
Purity tests were carried out by inoculation on nutrient agar, glucose peptone agar and yeast mannitol bromthymol blue agar (YMB) (SOMASEGARAN & HOBEN, 1994). Successive sub culturing on yeast mannitol Congo red agar (YMCR) was made to obtain variants with colonies of distinct and stable morphology. These were typed by serological agglutination tests (LEMOS, 1994) with hyperimmune sera to the original strains supplied by the FEPAGRO centre. For antibiotic resistance evaluation of the variants were grown in YMCR and after one week inoculated on plates of the same medium containing streptomycin sulphate, novobiocin (80, 100, 200, 300 mg/ml) and kannamycin (60, 80, 100, 200 mg/ml). After seven days of incubation at 28°C, the plates with growth were considered resistant.
Electrophoretic analysis of isoenzymes was performed in the Laboratory of Microbiology UNESP Jaboticabal. Isolates was grown in 50ml of tryptone-yeast medium (TY) (ENGVILD & NIELSEN, 1985) for 72 hours at 28ºC and 120rpm. After centrifugation (15,000 X g, 4ºC 20min), the bacterial pellet was washed several times in saline solution. The cells were suspended and diluted in saline until turbidity of 400 Kletts units and then centrifuged for 5 min at 12,000g.
The pellet was resuspended in 0.5ml of extraction buffer, centrifuged for 5min and then suspended in extraction buffer plus lysozyme and left for 10min. After, the pellet was resuspended in 0,5ml of sonification buffer (100ml TRIS-HCL 0,1M pH 8,8 in 15g glycerol) (LEMOS, 1994) and kept on ice to avoid protein denaturation. The cells were disrupted with ultra sound by 10min in an ice bath with 10 second pulses, centrifuged for 5min (12,000 X g) at 4ºC and the supernatant collected for electrophoresis in polyacrilamide gel by one hour and 15min at 4ºC and 200V.
After electrophoresis, the gels were incubated for 30 min in phosphate buffer (0,1M pH 6,2) and stained for esterases and 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase. Aliquots of 100ml of phosphate buffer plus 100mg Fast Blue-RR salt and 60mg of a-naphtylacetate in acetone solution was added to the gel for a-esterase detection. It was stained with phosphate buffer 0.1M, plus 100mg Fast Blue RR salt and 40mg b-naphtylacetate for b-esterase detection. After colour change the gels were washed in a mixture of ethanol, acetic acid and water (PASTEUR et al., 1988). For detection of 3-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase the gel was shaked for 15min in a solution of 20ml Tris-HCl with 50mg D, L-b-hydroxybutyrate and 0.5ml NAD 1%. After 15min, 0,5ml of MTT (3-4, 5-dimethythiazolyl-2-2, 5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide) and 0.5ml of PMS (phenazine methosulphate) were added for the observation of the bands.
The infective capacity, nodulation, nitrogen fixation and competitive ability of the variants were evaluated with the soybean varieties IAS 5 and Jacui 7 inoculated in growth pouches and Leonard jars (SOMASEGARAN & HOBEN, 1994). After germination, the seedlings were inoculated with the cultures of variants. To assess competitive ability the variants were mixed in pairs and the nodule occupation was determined by the agglutination method (LEMOS, 1994) in 40 nodules/pot. Stock cultures were not used in the competition experiments because they would be indeed mixtures of variants. The index of relative efficiency (Efrª), which is a result of the total nitrogen of treatments in relation to the nitrogen controls, was determined as indicated by BROCKWELL et al. (1966).
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Based on the colony morphology, two variants, 5080 P and 5080 G, were isolated from B. japonicum strain SEMIA 5080 and two from B. elkanii strain SEMIA 5019. The variant 5080 P produced punctiform, butirous and translucent colonies, and was markedly distinct from the colony morphology of the strain SEMIA 5080 and from the other variant 5080 G that showed abundant growth and acid production on YMB agar. The variants 5019 P and 5019 G produced colonies strikingly different. The variants of strain SEMIA 587 showed little difference in colony morphology (Table 1).
The variants of strain SEMIA 5080 were susceptible to kanamycin, streptomycin, novobiocin and tetracycline, while those from strain 587 were resistant (Table1). Similar result was obtained by SATO (1995) who showed that B. japonicum strains are less resistant than those of B. elkanii, confirmed by the observations of BODDEY & HUNGRIA (1997). The variant 5019 P showed resistance to novobiocin and tetracycline and was susceptible to kanamycin and streptomycin (Table 1). Colony morphology of variants of B. japonicum was related to the antibiotic resistance (MEYER & PUEPPKE, 1980). This characteristic seems not be general and was not pointed by other works (MULLEN & WOLLUN, 1989; SATO, 1995). Intrinsic resistance to antibiotics together with serological analysis are important characteristics that may contribute to the initial selection of a dominant strain with higher survival and competitiveness.
The electrophoretic isoenzyme analysis showed that variants 5080 G, 5080 P, 587 P2 and 587 P7 had no polymorphic differences. However, variants 5019 G and 5019 P had completely different profiles, in spite of being of the same serological group. Similar results were observed with spontaneous and induced variants of Bradyrhizobium that varied in the enzymes ( and (-esterase profiles (KOZUSNY-ANDREANI, 1992). The electrophoretic profiles of a and ß esterases (Figure 1A and 1B) showed similarity of variants obtained from SEMIA 5080, but those differed from those of SEMIA 587 and SEMIA 5019 strains. These results were also found by LEMOS (1994) who confirmed the four homology groups already defined. The enzymatic polymorphism tests might be an efficient way to characterize strains and establish the genetic structure of rhizobia populations (ENGVILD & NIELSEN, 1985; ENGVILD et al., 1990). The restricted differences found in this study (only between variants of strain 5019) might be related to the small number of enzymes tested.
The variant 5080 P did not form nodules neither in the soybean variety IAS 5, it just produced two nodules, nor in Jacui 7 (Table 2). All other variants showed adequate, although variable, nodulation and nitrogen fixation. Differences however occurred according to the soybean variety tested. The symbiotic efficiency of the variants, measured by relative efficiency index (Table 2), allows to calculate the relative contribution of the symbiotic nitrogen fixation. The variants 587 P7 and 5019 P had a better performance in Jacui 7, compared to IAS 5. The variant 5080 P was the worst on its incapacity to form nodules. SATO (1995) observed that variants 587 P2 and 587 P7 also showed completely different behaviour in efficiency of N2 fixation. In this study variant 587 P2 formed a large number of nodules in Jacui 7 with no nitrogen fixation, while the variant 587 P7 was highly effective. However, these two variants showed similar nitrogen fixation efficiency in the soybean variety IAS 5 (Table 2), there were clear differences between these variants from the same strain.
In the competition experiment (Table 3) higher capacity for nodule formation was observed with variants 5019 G and 5019 P than the others when inoculated in the soybean variety IAS 5. However, in Jacui 7 the reverse occurred, with 587 P2 and 587 P7 predominating over variants of the strain 5019. Competitiveness was inherent in strain and expression differed with variety. The high competitive ability of strains SEMIA 587 and SEMIA 5019 had also been observed before in four soybean varieties (PERES & VIDOR, 1980).
The nitrogen fixation efficiency of the variants separately (Table 2) compared with the results in mixture and the competitive ability in mixtures (Table 3) showed that the predominance of a more efficient variant determines the final results of symbiosis. In mixtures with less efficient variants as 5080 P + 587 P2 the result was affected and the lack of infectivity of the variant 5080 P was confirmed in both varieties. In these mixtures of variants (5080G + 587 P2) in spite of the absolute predominance of the variant 587 P2 productiveness in dry matter and total nitrogen of the plants was also low. It is not possible to explain this behaviour.
Relationship between colony morphology and nitrogen fixation has been pointed (MEYER & PUEPPKE 1980; MULLEN & WOLLUN 1989). However, no consistent correlation was found in this study, consistent with other works (RODRIGUEZ et al., 1987; BASIT et al., 1991 and SATO, 1995).
CONCLUSIONS
Our results indicate that spontaneous variation in rhizobia strains may occur and the isolation and selection of variants may be possibly based on easily detectable characteristics as stable colony morphology and symbiotic behaviour. When spontaneous variation occurred in a rhizobial culture for inoculant production, the resulting mixture with ineffective variants will produce a low quality inoculant. Relationship analysis between symbiotic characteristics and colony morphology or antibiotic resistance wasnt conclusive. The variability in rhizobia strains might be an important factor to be considered in strain selection and preservation of cultures for inoculant production. Stable and efficient variants were obtained from the stock cultures and they may be recommended for inoculant production in the place of the original cultures, if results are confirmed in future experiments.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We are grateful to Prof. Eliana Lemos for her assistance in electrophoretic analysis, to the FEPAGRO BNF Centre for the rhizobia cultures and antiserum and to Prof. Christine Gaylarde for language revision.
Recebido para publicação 29.01.03
Aprovado em 03.03.04
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Characterization of variants of Bradyrhizobium elkanii and B. japonicum and symbiotic behaviour in soybeans
Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
03 Sept 2004 -
Date of issue
Oct 2004
History
-
Received
29 Jan 2003 -
Accepted
03 Mar 2004