In multi-strain inoculations, mutation of Medicago symbiosis genes creates a complex selective landscape for naturally-occurring genetic variation in rhizobia

Sohini Guha, Regina B Bledsoe, Jeremy Sutherland, Brendan Epstein, Gwendolyn M Fry, Nevin Dale Young, Peter Tiffin, Liana Twardosz Burghardt
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Abstract

In the mutualism between leguminous plants and rhizobia bacteria, rhizobia live inside root nodules, creating the potential for host genes to shape the rhizobial selective environment. Single-strain screens have identified many host genes influencing symbiosis. However, it's unknown whether these genes influence which rhizobial strains colonize and thrive inside nodules during multi-strain inoculations. In this study, we inoculated 18 Medicago truncatula symbiotic mutants (including mutations that alter NCR peptide production, plant defence, and nodule number regulation) with a mixture of 86 Sinorhizobium meliloti strains. In multi-strain inoculations, most mutations led to reduced host benefits but widely varying effects on host investment and rhizobial benefit (i.e., strain relative fitness), revealing widespread host gene by strain fitness interactions. Genome-wide association studies identify genetic variants on rhizobial replicons pSymA and pSymB as important in mediating strain fitness responses to host mutations. While most top variants only affected rhizobial fitness when one host gene was disrupted, we identified ten variant groups with pervasive effects across six or more host mutations. These variants occurred primarily on pSymA, the symbiotic replicon, and include fixL and a few metabolic genes. In contrast to the limited-effect variants, variants with pervasive positive effects in mutants tended to adversely affect strain fitness in wild-type hosts. Our results reveal how host symbiosis genes perturb the selective landscape and symbiotic outcomes for rhizobia and set the stage for improving rhizobial inoculants and breeding legume hosts better adapted for multi-strain environments.
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在多菌株接种中,Medicago 共生基因的突变为根瘤菌中自然存在的遗传变异创造了复杂的选择景观
在豆科植物与根瘤菌之间的互生关系中,根瘤菌生活在根瘤内部,这就为宿主基因塑造根瘤菌的选择性环境创造了可能。单菌株筛选已经发现了许多影响共生的宿主基因。然而,在多菌株接种过程中,这些基因是否会影响哪些根瘤菌株在根瘤内定植和生长,目前还不得而知。在这项研究中,我们用 86 株美黑藻根瘤菌(Sinorhizobium meliloti)的混合物接种了 18 个美智子(Medicago truncatula)共生突变体(包括改变 NCR 肽生产、植物防御和结核数量调节的突变体)。在多菌株接种中,大多数突变导致宿主获益减少,但对宿主投资和根瘤菌获益(即菌株相对适合度)的影响却大不相同,这揭示了宿主基因与菌株适合度之间广泛的相互作用。全基因组关联研究发现,根瘤菌复制子 pSymA 和 pSymB 上的遗传变异在介导菌株对宿主突变的适应性反应方面起着重要作用。虽然大多数顶级变异只在一个宿主基因被破坏时才会影响根瘤菌的适应性,但我们发现有十个变异组在六个或更多的宿主突变中具有普遍影响。这些变异主要发生在共生复制子 pSymA 上,包括 fixL 和一些代谢基因。与有限效应变异不同,在突变体中具有普遍积极效应的变异往往会对野生型宿主的菌株适应性产生不利影响。我们的研究结果揭示了宿主共生基因如何扰乱根瘤菌的选择格局和共生结果,为改进根瘤菌接种剂和培育更适应多菌株环境的豆科宿主奠定了基础。
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