Affiliation:
1. Laboratoire des Symbioses Tropicales et Méditerranéennes, UMR 113 IRD-Cirad-SupAgro-UM2/USC INRA, Campus de Baillarguet, 34398 Montpellier Cedex 5, France
2. Institut des Sciences de l'Evolution de Montpellier, UMR 5554 CNRS-UM2, Montpellier, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Using nitrogen-fixing
Sinorhizobium
species that interact with
Medicago
plants as a model system, we aimed at clarifying how sex has shaped the diversity of bacteria associated with the genus
Medicago
on the interspecific and intraspecific scales. To gain insights into the diversification of these symbionts, we inferred a topology that includes the different specificity groups which interact with
Medicago
species, based on sequences of the nodulation gene cluster. Furthermore, 126 bacterial isolates were obtained from two soil samples, using
Medicago truncatula
and
Medicago laciniata
as host plants, to study the differentiation between populations of
Sinorhizobium medicae
,
Sinorhizobium meliloti
bv. meliloti, and
S. meliloti
bv. medicaginis. The former two can be associated with
M. truncatula
(among other species of
Medicago
), whereas the last organism is the specific symbiont of
M. laciniata
. These bacteria were characterized using a multilocus sequence analysis of four loci, located on the chromosome and on the two megaplasmids of
S. meliloti.
The phylogenetic results reveal that several interspecific horizontal gene transfers occurred during the diversification of
Medicago
symbionts. Within
S. meliloti
, the analyses show that
nod
genes specific to different host plants have spread to different genetic backgrounds through homologous recombination, preventing further divergence of the different ecotypes. Thus, specialization to different host plant species does not prevent the occurrence of gene flow among host-specific biovars of
S. meliloti
, whereas reproductive isolation between
S. meliloti
bv. meliloti and
S. medicae
is maintained even though these bacteria can cooccur in sympatry on the same individual host plants.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
78 articles.
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