1. Metapopulation dominance and genomic-island acquisition ofBradyrhizobiumwith superior catabolic capabilities
- Author
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Devora Moore, Roxanne M. Bantay, Amanda C. Hollowell, Kelsey A. Gano-Cohen, Jonathan Pham, David A. Turissini, John U. Regus, Joel L. Sachs, and Andrew Bernardo
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Medical and Health Sciences ,epidemic ,Models ,Genomic island ,Bradyrhizobium ,Research Articles ,Soil Microbiology ,Phylogeny ,General Environmental Science ,biology ,food and beverages ,Fabaceae ,General Medicine ,Biological Sciences ,fitness ,symbiont ,Root Nodules ,Root Nodules, Plant ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Biotechnology ,Genomic Islands ,Evolution ,030106 microbiology ,Acmispon strigosus ,rhizobia ,Host Specificity ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Carbon Cycle ,Rhizobia ,Evolution, Molecular ,selective sweep ,03 medical and health sciences ,genomic island ,Genetic ,Symbiosis ,Botany ,Genetics ,Models, Genetic ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Host (biology) ,Haplotype ,Molecular ,Plant ,biology.organism_classification ,Haplotypes ,Evolutionary biology ,Lotus ,Selective sweep - Abstract
Root nodule-forming rhizobia exhibit a bipartite lifestyle, replicating in soil and also within plant cells where they fix nitrogen for legume hosts. Host control models posit that legume hosts act as a predominant selective force on rhizobia, but few studies have examined rhizobial fitness in natural populations. Here, we genotyped and phenotypedBradyrhizobiumisolates across more than 800 km of the nativeAcmispon strigosushost range. We sequenced chromosomal genes expressed under free-living conditions and accessory symbiosis loci expressedin plantaand encoded on an integrated ‘symbiosis island’ (SI). We uncovered a massive clonal expansion restricted to theBradyrhizobiumchromosome, with a single chromosomal haplotype dominating populations, ranging more than 700 km, and acquiring 42 divergent SI haplotypes, none of which were spatially widespread. For focal genotypes, we quantified utilization of 190 sole-carbon sources relevant to soil fitness. Chromosomal haplotypes that were both widespread and dominant exhibited superior growth on diverse carbon sources, whereas these patterns were not mirrored among SI haplotypes. Abundance, spatial range and catabolic superiority of chromosomal, but not symbiosis genotypes suggests that fitness in the soil environment, rather than symbiosis with hosts, might be the key driver ofBradyrhizobiumdominance.
- Published
- 2016
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