Abstract:
Biological nitrogen fixation, via the legume-rhizobium symbiosis, is a
renewable and natural source of nitrogen for plants. Rhizobia enter into symbiotic
relationship with legumes and induce the formation of root nodules where the
atmospheric nitrogen is fixed in the form of ammonia by the changed form of
rhizobial bacteria called bacteroids. A number of genes and nutritional conditions
in the developing bacteroids are supposed to affect nitrogen fixation. Earlier
reports have shown that some metabolites of the biosynthetic pathways of some
amino acids, nucleotide bases and vitamins have a role in symbiosis. This work
was taken up with the aim to study the role of arginine biosynthetic pathway of
Sinorhizobium meliloti in symbiosis.
S. meliloti Rmd201, a streptomycin resistant derivative of the strain
AK631, was conjugated with Escherichia coli WA803 (pGS9). Kanamycin
resistant transconjugants of S. meliloti were selected by plating the mating
mixture on complete medium (Tryptone yeast extract) agar plates containing
kanamycin (400 ixg/ml) and streptomycin (100 ug/ml). A total of 7,650 Tn5-
induced kanamycin resistant transconjugants were obtained from 128 crosses.
These transconjugants were screened for auxotrophs by streaking on Rhizobium
minimal medium (RMM). The nutritional requirements of the auxotrophs were
determined on RMM supplemented with Holliday pools. Following auxotrophs
(the number of each type is given in brackets) were obtained: arginine (15),
methionine (3), tryptophan (2), cysteine (7), uracil (3) and adenine (2). The 15
arginine-requiring auxotrophs (AK3, AK4, AK5, AK6, AK7, AK8, AK9, AK10,
AK11, AK12, AK13, AK14, AK15, AK16, AK25) obtained were used for further
studies. The frequency of spontaneous reversion to prototrophy was determined
for each auxotroph by plating a known number of mutant cells on RMM. The
reversion frequencies varied from 1.0 x10"9 for AK5 to 3.0 x 10"9for AK15. When
transposon Tn5-encoded kanamycin resistance marker of each arginine
auxotroph was transferred to S. meliloti ZB201 strain, all kanamycin resistant
transconjugants (150 in each case) were found to be arginine auxotrophs. One
hundred per cent co-transfer of Tn5 and auxotrophy indicated complete linkage
of transposon Tn5 insertion to auxotrophy.
The biochemical block in each arginine-requiring auxotroph was
determined by streaking it on the minimal medium (RMM) supplemented with
different intermediates, viz. ornithine, citrulline and arginosuccinic acid, of the
arginine biosynthetic pathway. On the basis of intermediate feeding arginine
auxotrophic mutants were classified into following four categories: ( i )
argA/argB/argC/argD/argE mutants (AK3, AK4 and AK5) which grew on RMM
supplemented with ornithine, citrulline or arginosuccinic acid; these mutants were
also designated as ornithine auxotrophs, (ii) argF/argl mutants (AK6, AK7, AK8,
AK10, AK11, AK13, AK14, AK15, AK16 and AK25 ) which did not grow on RMM
supplemented with ornithine but grew on RMM supplemented with citrulline or
arginosuccinic acid, ( iii ) argG mutant (AK12) which did not grow on RMM
supplemented with ornithine or citrulline but grew on RMM supplemented with
arginosuccinic acid and ( iv ) argH mutant (AK9) which did not grow on RMM
supplemented with ornithine, citrulline or arginosuccinic acid.
All the mutants, like the parental strain Rmd201, showed growth in
presence of sodium deoxycholate (DOC), took up congo red dye, fluoresced in
presence of calcoflour white under the UV light and showed motility on swarm
plates, indicating the normal production of lipopolysaccharides, cellulose fibrils,
succinylated exopolysaccharides and P(1^2) glucans, respectively. These
auxotrophs did not show binding with aniline blue dye which indicated that
p(1^3) glucans, like the parental strain, were not produced. These results
showed that the Tn5 insertions had no pleiotropic effects on cell surface
characteristics. No change in growth of arginine auxotrophs was observed
when glucose in RMM medium was replaced by any one of the other sugars
(sucrose, arabinose, xylose, maltose, lactose, galactose, mannitol or fructose) or
dicarboxylic acids (malic acid, succinic acid, aspartic acid, glutamic acid or
fumaric acid) as a sole carbon source. These findings showed that the
uptake/utilization of sugars and dicarboxylic acids was not affected by Tn5
insertions in the arginine auxotrophs.
The symbiotic properties of arginine auxotrophs were determined by
inoculating alfalfa {Medicago sativa cv. T9 and cv. A2) seedlings grown
aseptically on nitrogen free agar media slants with these auxotrophs. The
parental strain Rmd201 and the arginine mutants in the later part of the pathway
(after ornithine) induced cylindrical, pink nodules on both primary and lateral
roots of plants of both alfalfa cultivars, T9 and A2. These results indicated that
the nitrogen fixing efficiencies of these mutants were similar to that of the
parental strain. The nodules induced by ornithine auxotrophs and AK10, an
argF/argl mutant, were spherical/irregular and white; these nodules were located
mostly on the lateral roots. These results indicated that these auxotrophs did not
fix nitrogen.
Normal symbiosis, like that of the parental strain, was observed when
alfalfa plants were inoculated with the spontaneous revertants of ornithine
auxotrophs. The reisolation studies showed 100% occupancy of nodules by the
arginine auxotrophs.
Light microscopic studies of the longitudinal section of the nodule induced
by the parental strain Rmd201 showed a central tissue surrounded by several
peripheral tissues. The central tissue was differentiated into five zones, viz.,
meristematic zone, infection zone, interzone between infection and nitrogen
fixation zones, nitrogen fixation zone and senescence zone. The internal
structural features of the nodules induced by arginine auxotrophs argF/argl
(AK11), argG (AK12) and argH (AK9) were similar to those of the parental strain
induced nodules. Distinct peripheral and central tissues like those in the parental
strain induced nodules were seen in the nodules of the ornithine auxotrophs AK3
and AK4. The central tissues of these nodules, like that of the parental strain
induced nodules, were differentiated into five zones; however, the infection and
the senescence zones were larger than those of Rmd201 nodules. The nitrogen
fixation zone in the nodules of ornithine auxotrophs was identified on the basis of
its visual resemblance to the nitrogen fixation zone of the Rmd201 induced
nodules. In comparison to the parental strain induced nodule, few nodule cells
were infected with rhizobia in the interzone and the so-called nitrogen fixation
zone.
TEM studies of the ultrathin section of the nodule induced by the parental
strain Rmd201 showed the presence of poly-, -hydroxy butyrate (PHB) granules
in the rhizobial bacteria in infection threads and in freshly released rhizobia in
nodule cells. Peribacteroid membrane (pbm) surrounded each freshly released
bacterial cell. Some bacteroids in the senescence zone had broken pbm. The
cytoplasm of the rhizobial bacteria in the infection zone was electron dense
whereas the cytoplasm of the bacteroids in the interzone and nitrogen fixation
zone was heterogeneous in the sense that it contained electron dense and
electron transparent regions. The cytoplasm of the bacteroids in the senescence
zone was electron transparent. Most of the bacteroids in the nitrogen fixation
zone were elongated. All stages of the infection of plant cells by rhizobial bacteria
and the subsequent bacteroidal development in the nodules induced by the
ornithine auxotrophs were similar to those seen in the parental strain induced
nodule except that the bacteroids in the so-called nitrogen fixation zone of
ornithine mutants were mostly spherical or oval. TEM studies revealed that the
internal structures of the nodules induced by argF/argl, argG and argH mutants
were similar to the internal structure of the nodule induced by the parental strain
Rmd201.
The induction of fully effective nodules by arginine auxotrophs, each
having a biochemical block in one of the last three steps (i.e. after ornithine) of
the arginine biosynthetic pathway (with the exception of one mutant AK10), on
two cultivars of alfalfa plants showed that alfalfa host plant is able to provide the
required quantity of arginine to S. meliloti bacteria during symbiosis. AK10
mutant, apart from having a Tn5 insertion in the argF gene, appears to have
another mutation in one of its symbiotic genes. The studies on the ornithine
requiring arginine auxotrophs indicate that ornithine or an ornithine-derived factor
is required for the normal development of nitrogen fixation zone and complete
transformation of rhizobial bacteria into bacteroids during the symbiosis of S.
meliloti with alfalfa plants. Normal symbiotic activity of the prototrophs of ornithine
auxotrophs indicated that a single Tn5 insertion in each of these auxotrophs was
responsible for auxotrophy and the symbiotic defect.