Dynamic nitrogen fixation in an aerobic endophyte of Populus

Author:

Sher Andrew W1,Aufrecht Jayde A2,Herrera Daisy2,Zimmerman Amy E3,Kim Young-Mo3,Munoz Nathalie2,Trejo Jesse B3,Paurus Vanessa L3,Cliff John B2,Hu Dehong2,Chrisler William B2,Tournay Robert J1,Gomez-Rivas Emma1,Orr Galya2,Ahkami Amir H2,Doty Sharon L1

Affiliation:

1. School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, College of the Environment, University of Washington , Seattle, WA, 98195-2100 , United States

2. Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory , Richland, WA, 99354 , United States

3. Biological Sciences Division, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory , Richland, WA, 99354 , United States

Abstract

Abstract Biological nitrogen fixation by microbial diazotrophs can contribute significantly to nitrogen availability in non-nodulating plant species. In this study of molecular mechanisms and gene expression relating to biological nitrogen fixation, the aerobic nitrogen-fixing endophyte Burkholderia vietnamiensis, strain WPB, isolated from Populus trichocarpa served as a model for endophyte–poplar interactions. Nitrogen-fixing activity was observed to be dynamic on nitrogen-free medium with a subset of colonies growing to form robust, raised globular like structures. Secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS) confirmed that N-fixation was uneven within the population. A fluorescent transcriptional reporter (GFP) revealed that the nitrogenase subunit nifH is not uniformly expressed across genetically identical colonies of WPB and that only ~11% of the population was actively expressing the nifH gene. Higher nifH gene expression was observed in clustered cells through monitoring individual bacterial cells using single-molecule fluorescence in situ hybridization. Through 15N2 enrichment, we identified key nitrogenous metabolites and proteins synthesized by WPB and employed targeted metabolomics in active and inactive populations. We cocultivated WPB Pnif-GFP with poplar within a RhizoChip, a synthetic soil habitat, which enabled direct imaging of microbial nifH expression within root epidermal cells. We observed that nifH expression is localized to the root elongation zone where the strain forms a unique physical interaction with the root cells. This work employed comprehensive experimentation to identify novel mechanisms regulating both biological nitrogen fixation and beneficial plant–endophyte interactions.

Funder

Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory

United States Department of Energy Office of Science

Office of Biological and Environmental Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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