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To understand the genetic mechanism of host specificity in the interaction between rhizobia and their hosts, it is important to identify genes that influence both early and late steps in symbiotic development. This paper focuses on the little-understood genetics of host-specific nitrogen fixation. A deletion mutant of Bradyrhizobium japonicum, strain NAD163, was found to induce effective, nitrogen-fixing nodules on soybean and siratro plants but produced ineffective nodules on cowpea plants. Additional transposon and deletion mutants defined a small region that conferred this phenotype, and this region was sequenced to identify two putative open reading frames (ORFs). Data indicate that only one of these ORFs is detectable in bacteroids. This ORF was termed hsfA, with a predicted protein product of 11 kDa. The transcriptional start site of hsfA was determined and found to coincide with a predicted RpoN-dependent promoter. Microscopic studies of nodules induced by the wild type and hsfA mutants on cowpea and soybean plants indicate that the cowpea mutant nodules are slow to develop. The data indicate that hsfA appears to play a crucial role in bacteroid development on cowpea but does not appear to be essential for nitrogen fixation on the other hosts tested.

Citation

J Y Chun, G L Sexton, L E Roth, G Stacey. Identification and characterization of a novel Bradyrhizobium japonicum gene involved in host-specific nitrogen fixation. Journal of bacteriology. 1994 Nov;176(21):6717-29

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PMID: 7961425

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