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The widely distributed legume tree Vachellia (Acacia) nilotica subsp. indica is nodulated by genetically diverse Ensifer strains in India
Vachellia (syn. Acacia ) nilotica subsp. indica is a widespread legume tree in India of ecological and economic importance due to its ability to nodulate and fix nitrogen. The structure of V. nilotica nodules was examined and diversity of its rhizobial symbionts in various locations in India was ass...
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Published in: | Symbiosis (Philadelphia, Pa.) Pa.), 2020, Vol.80 (1), p.15-31 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Vachellia
(syn.
Acacia
)
nilotica
subsp.
indica
is a widespread legume tree in India of ecological and economic importance due to its ability to nodulate and fix nitrogen. The structure of
V. nilotica
nodules was examined and diversity of its rhizobial symbionts in various locations in India was assessed. More than a hundred strains were purified from indeterminate
Vachellia
-type root nodules on seedlings grown in alkaline soils from different regions of Thar Desert in Western Rajasthan and in neighbouring states (Gujarat, Haryana, Punjab). Plants grown in acidic soils of Meghalaya and Nagaland failed to nodulate. Twenty-one strains identified as species of
Ensifer
(
Sinorhizobium
) based on their 16S rRNA gene sequences and grouped into seven
recA-
types. Eight strains were characterized using two additional housekeeping (
glnII
,
dnaK
) and symbiotic (
nodA
,
nifH
) genes. A concatenated core gene phylogeny revealed that
V. nilotica
-
Ensifer
strains are novel and genetically diversified from
E
.
saheli
,
E
.
arboris
,
E
.
terangae
and
E. americanus
. Most are distinct from
Ensifer
strains previously reported in mimosoid, caesalpinioid and papilionoid legume species of W. Rajasthan. These
Ensifer
strains harboured typical mimosoid-type symbiotic genes that were diversified from
E
.
arboris
,
E
.
kostiensis
and
E
.
terangae
. They nodulated other mimosoids (
Prosopis cineraria
,
Mimosa hamata
,
Senegalia senegal
and
Vachellia
spp.), but failed to make symbiotic interactions with a papilionoid crop species,
Vigna radiata
, suggesting their specificity towards mimosoids.
Vachellia nilotica
is quite promiscuous, fixing nitrogen in symbiosis with diverse strains of
Ensifer
, and has successfully invaded various agro-climatic regions, thus indicating that it could be exploited for agroforestry projects. |
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ISSN: | 0334-5114 1878-7665 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s13199-019-00658-8 |