Polyphasic characteristics of bradyrhizobia isolated from nodules of peanut (Arachis hypogaea) in China

2005 
Abstract Peanuts ( Arachis hypogaea L.) were introduced to China about 500 years ago. However, the diversity of Rhizobial strains in China that can nodulate peanut was poorly understand. Diversity and phylogeny of 50 slow-growing strains, isolated from root nodules of peanut in different geographical regions of China, were studied using polyphasic techniques. All stains were clustered by phenotypic tests into two distinct groups: Group I: 16S rRNA RFLP genotype 3, and Group II, which divided into 16S rRNA RFLP genotypes 1 and 2. Genotype 1 shares the same genotype with USDA110, USDA122 and USDA127 of Bradyrhizobium japonicum , and genotype 2 solely consisted of extra-slow growing bradyrhizobia isolated from Hongan, China. Results of 16S rRNA sequencing revealed that peanut bradyrhizobia were phylogenetically related to B. japonicum and their sequence divergence was less than 1.1%. Based upon the size of the internally transcribed spacer (ITS) between the16S and 23S RNA genes, strains were classified into ITS-I, ITS-II and ITS-III genotypes. Strains could be further divided into sub-clusters IA, IB, IIa, IIb and IIc five sub-clusters through ITS PCR-RFLP and repetitive extragenic palindromic PCR (REP-PCR) analysis. Host specificity test revealed that all peanut bradyrhizobia tested nodulated Phaseolus vulgaris and strains of clusters IIb and IIc nodulated Glycine soja efficiently. Bradyrhizobia isolated from peanut were related, but still exhibited phylogenetical divergence with B. japonicum .
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