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Complete genome of the mutualistic, N2-fixing grass endophyte Azoarcus sp. strain BH72.

Authors :
Krause, Andrea
Ramakumar, Adarsh
Bartels, Daniela
Battistoni, Federico
Bekel, Thomas
Boch, Jens
Böhm, Melanie
Friedrich, Frauke
Hurek, Thomas
Krause, Lutz
Linke, Burkhard
McHardy, Alice C.
Sarkar, Abhijit
Schneiker, Susanne
Syed, Arshad Ali
Thauer, Rudolf
Vorhölter, Frank-Jörg
Weidner, Stefan
Pühler, Alfred
Reinhold-Hurek, Barbara
Source :
Nature Biotechnology; Nov2006, Vol. 24 Issue 11, p1385-1391, 7p, 4 Diagrams, 1 Chart, 1 Graph
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Azoarcus sp. strain BH72, a mutualistic endophyte of rice and other grasses, is of agrobiotechnological interest because it supplies biologically fixed nitrogen to its host and colonizes plants in remarkably high numbers without eliciting disease symptoms. The complete genome sequence is 4,376,040-bp long and contains 3,992 predicted protein-coding sequences. Genome comparison with the Azoarcus-related soil bacterium strain EbN1 revealed a surprisingly low degree of synteny. Coding sequences involved in the synthesis of surface components potentially important for plant-microbe interactions were more closely related to those of plant-associated bacteria. Strain BH72 appears to be 'disarmed' compared to plant pathogens, having only a few enzymes that degrade plant cell walls; it lacks type III and IV secretion systems, related toxins and an N-acyl homoserine lactones–based communication system. The genome contains remarkably few mobile elements, indicating a low rate of recent gene transfer that is presumably due to adaptation to a stable, low-stress microenvironment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10870156
Volume :
24
Issue :
11
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Biotechnology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23066713
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt1243