Okubo_2012_Microbes.Environ_27_306

Reference

Title : Complete genome sequence of Bradyrhizobium sp. S23321: insights into symbiosis evolution in soil oligotrophs - Okubo_2012_Microbes.Environ_27_306
Author(s) : Okubo T , Tsukui T , Maita H , Okamoto S , Oshima K , Fujisawa T , Saito A , Futamata H , Hattori R , Shimomura Y , Haruta S , Morimoto S , Wang Y , Sakai Y , Hattori M , Aizawa S , Nagashima KV , Masuda S , Hattori T , Yamashita A , Bao Z , Hayatsu M , Kajiya-Kanegae H , Yoshinaga I , Sakamoto K , Toyota K , Nakao M , Kohara M , Anda M , Niwa R , Jung-Hwan P , Sameshima-Saito R , Tokuda S , Yamamoto S , Yokoyama T , Akutsu T , Nakamura Y , Nakahira-Yanaka Y , Takada Hoshino Y , Hirakawa H , Mitsui H , Terasawa K , Itakura M , Sato S , Ikeda-Ohtsubo W , Sakakura N , Kaminuma E , Minamisawa K
Ref : Microbes Environ , 27 :306 , 2012
Abstract :

Bradyrhizobium sp. S23321 is an oligotrophic bacterium isolated from paddy field soil. Although S23321 is phylogenetically close to Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA110, a legume symbiont, it is unable to induce root nodules in siratro, a legume often used for testing Nod factor-dependent nodulation. The genome of S23321 is a single circular chromosome, 7,231,841 bp in length, with an average GC content of 64.3%. The genome contains 6,898 potential protein-encoding genes, one set of rRNA genes, and 45 tRNA genes. Comparison of the genome structure between S23321 and USDA110 showed strong colinearity; however, the symbiosis islands present in USDA110 were absent in S23321, whose genome lacked a chaperonin gene cluster (groELS3) for symbiosis regulation found in USDA110. A comparison of sequences around the tRNA-Val gene strongly suggested that S23321 contains an ancestral-type genome that precedes the acquisition of a symbiosis island by horizontal gene transfer. Although S23321 contains a nif (nitrogen fixation) gene cluster, the organization, homology, and phylogeny of the genes in this cluster were more similar to those of photosynthetic bradyrhizobia ORS278 and BTAi1 than to those on the symbiosis island of USDA110. In addition, we found genes encoding a complete photosynthetic system, many ABC transporters for amino acids and oligopeptides, two types (polar and lateral) of flagella, multiple respiratory chains, and a system for lignin monomer catabolism in the S23321 genome. These features suggest that S23321 is able to adapt to a wide range of environments, probably including low-nutrient conditions, with multiple survival strategies in soil and rhizosphere.

PubMedSearch : Okubo_2012_Microbes.Environ_27_306
PubMedID: 22452844
Gene_locus related to this paper: 9brad-i0g2u8 , 9brad-i0gf89 , braja-pcaD , 9brad-i0fzh8 , 9brad-i0gfv2 , 9brad-i0g2y4

Related information

Gene_locus 9brad-i0g2u8    9brad-i0gf89    braja-pcaD    9brad-i0fzh8    9brad-i0gfv2    9brad-i0g2y4

Citations formats

Okubo T, Tsukui T, Maita H, Okamoto S, Oshima K, Fujisawa T, Saito A, Futamata H, Hattori R, Shimomura Y, Haruta S, Morimoto S, Wang Y, Sakai Y, Hattori M, Aizawa S, Nagashima KV, Masuda S, Hattori T, Yamashita A, Bao Z, Hayatsu M, Kajiya-Kanegae H, Yoshinaga I, Sakamoto K, Toyota K, Nakao M, Kohara M, Anda M, Niwa R, Jung-Hwan P, Sameshima-Saito R, Tokuda S, Yamamoto S, Yokoyama T, Akutsu T, Nakamura Y, Nakahira-Yanaka Y, Takada Hoshino Y, Hirakawa H, Mitsui H, Terasawa K, Itakura M, Sato S, Ikeda-Ohtsubo W, Sakakura N, Kaminuma E, Minamisawa K (2012)
Complete genome sequence of Bradyrhizobium sp. S23321: insights into symbiosis evolution in soil oligotrophs
Microbes Environ 27 :306

Okubo T, Tsukui T, Maita H, Okamoto S, Oshima K, Fujisawa T, Saito A, Futamata H, Hattori R, Shimomura Y, Haruta S, Morimoto S, Wang Y, Sakai Y, Hattori M, Aizawa S, Nagashima KV, Masuda S, Hattori T, Yamashita A, Bao Z, Hayatsu M, Kajiya-Kanegae H, Yoshinaga I, Sakamoto K, Toyota K, Nakao M, Kohara M, Anda M, Niwa R, Jung-Hwan P, Sameshima-Saito R, Tokuda S, Yamamoto S, Yokoyama T, Akutsu T, Nakamura Y, Nakahira-Yanaka Y, Takada Hoshino Y, Hirakawa H, Mitsui H, Terasawa K, Itakura M, Sato S, Ikeda-Ohtsubo W, Sakakura N, Kaminuma E, Minamisawa K (2012)
Microbes Environ 27 :306