C. Wegener et al., Genetic uniformity and symbiotic properties of acid-tolerant alfalfa-nodulating rhizobia isolated from dispersed locations throughout Argentina, SYMBIOSIS, 30(2-3), 2001, pp. 141-162
Alfalfa-nodulating rhizobia from acidic soils (pH 5.52-6.2) in Argentina co
mprise a distinct group of acid-tolerant Rhizobium isolates which were foun
d to be related to Rhizobium sp. strain Or 191 (Del Papa et al., 1999). Lip
opolysaccharide profiles and 16S rDNA sequences demonstrated that all twelv
e acid-tolerant Rhizobium isolates belonged to one species. Furthermore, th
e group of acid-tolerant Rhizobium isolates was formed by one strain type,
since they gave the same plasmid profile as well as the same IS- and ERIC-f
ingerprints. All acid-tolerant Rhizobium isolates were genetically identica
l even though they were isolated at very different locations in Argentina.
The isolates nodulated a range of Medicago, Melilotus and Trigonella specie
s, and Phaseolus vulgaris, but were weak in nitrogen fixation. M. sativa no
dules induced by one of the acid-tolerant rhizobial isolates contained seve
ral bacteroids within a vesicle-like structure, in contrast to nodules indu
ced by the reference strain S. meliloti 2011. Reisolation of bacteria from
root nodules resulted in approx. 40 times more colony forming bacteria in c
ase of the acid-tolerant strains. These strains mark the borderline between
a symbiotic and a parasitic plant-microbe interaction.