Affiliation:
1. Department of Plant Sciences, University of California, Davis, California, USA
2. Santa Clara Valley Water District, San Jose, California, USA
3. Department of Plant Biology, University of California, Davis, California, USA
4. College of Landscape Architecture, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou, China
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The actinobacterial genus
Frankia
establishes nitrogen-fixing root nodule symbioses with specific hosts within the nitrogen-fixing plant clade. Of four genetically distinct subgroups of
Frankia
, cluster I, II, and III strains are capable of forming effective nitrogen-fixing symbiotic associations, while cluster IV strains generally do not. Cluster II
Frankia
strains have rarely been detected in soil devoid of host plants, unlike cluster I or III strains, suggesting a stronger association with their host. To investigate the degree of host influence, we characterized the cluster II
Frankia
strain distribution in rhizosphere soil in three locations in northern California. The presence/absence of cluster II
Frankia
strains at a given site correlated significantly with the presence/absence of host plants on the site, as determined by glutamine synthetase (
glnA
) gene sequence analysis, and by microbiome analysis (16S rRNA gene) of a subset of host/nonhost rhizosphere soils. However, the distribution of cluster II
Frankia
strains was not significantly affected by other potential determinants such as host-plant species, geographical location, climate, soil pH, or soil type. Rhizosphere soil microbiome analysis showed that cluster II
Frankia
strains occupied only a minute fraction of the microbiome even in the host-plant-present site and further revealed no statistically significant difference in the α-diversity or in the microbiome composition between the host-plant-present or -absent sites. Taken together, these data suggest that host plants provide a factor that is specific for cluster II
Frankia
strains, not a general growth-promoting factor. Further, the factor accumulates or is transported at the site level, i.e., beyond the host rhizosphere.
IMPORTANCE
Biological nitrogen fixation is a bacterial process that accounts for a major fraction of net new nitrogen input in terrestrial ecosystems. Transfer of fixed nitrogen to plant biomass is especially efficient via root nodule symbioses, which represent evolutionarily and ecologically specialized mutualistic associations.
Frankia
spp. (
Actinobacteria
), especially cluster II
Frankia
spp., have an extremely broad host range, yet comparatively little is known about the soil ecology of these organisms in relation to the host plants and their rhizosphere microbiomes. This study reveals a strong influence of the host plant on soil distribution of cluster II
Frankia
spp.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology