Publication | Open Access
Genetic Diversity and Geographical Distribution of Indigenous Soybean-Nodulating Bradyrhizobia in the United States
69
Citations
46
References
2013
Year
Plant GeneticsBotanyGeneticsGenomicsUnited StatesPlant-pathogen InteractionGenetic DiversitySoybean Rj GenotypesPlant-rhizobia InteractionMicrobial EcologySoil MicrobiologyRhizospherePlant-microbe InteractionGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsBiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyCrop ProtectionMicrobiologyMedicineIndigenous Soybean-nodulating Bradyrhizobia
We investigated the relationship between the genetic diversity of indigenous soybean-nodulating bradyrhizobia and their geographical distribution in the United States using nine soil isolates from eight states. The bradyrhizobia were inoculated on three soybean Rj genotypes (non-Rj, Rj(2)Rj(3), and Rj(4)). We analyzed their genetic diversity and community structure by means of restriction fragment length polymorphisms of PCR amplicons to target the 16S-23S rRNA gene internal transcribed spacer region, using 11 USDA Bradyrhizobium strains as reference strains. We also performed diversity analysis, multidimensional scaling analysis based on the Bray-Curtis index, and polar ordination analysis to describe the structure and geographical distribution of the soybean-nodulating bradyrhizobial community. The major clusters were Bradyrhizobium japonicum Bj123, in the northern United States, and Bradyrhizobium elkanii, in the middle to southern regions. Dominance of bradyrhizobia in a community was generally larger for the cluster belonging to B. elkanii than for the cluster belonging to B. japonicum. The indigenous American soybean-nodulating bradyrhizobial community structure was strongly correlated with latitude. Our results suggest that this community varies geographically.
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