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  • Title: Phylogenetic study of rhizobia nodulating pea (Pisum sativum) isolated from different geographic locations in Tunisia.
    Author: Ilahi H, Hsouna J, Ellouze W, Gritli T, Chihaoui SA, Barhoumi F, Najib Elfeddy M, Bachkouel S, Ouahmane L, Tambong JT, Mnasri B.
    Journal: Syst Appl Microbiol; 2021 Jul; 44(4):126221. PubMed ID: 34119907.
    Abstract:
    Nodulated Pisum sativum plants showed the presence of native rhizobia in 16 out of 23 soil samples collected especially in northern and central Tunisia. A total of 130 bacterial strains were selected and three different ribotypes were revealed after PCR-RFLP analysis. Sequence analyses of rrs and four housekeeping genes (recA, atpD, dnaK and glnII) assigned 35 isolates to Rhizobium laguerreae, R. ruizarguesonis, Agrobacterium radiobacter, Ensifer meliloti and two putative genospecies. R. laguerreae was the most dominant species nodulating P. sativum with 63%. The isolates 21PS7 and 21PS15 were assigned to R. ruizarguesonis, and this is the first report of this species in Tunisia. Two putative new lineages were identified, since strains 25PS6, 10PS4 and 12PS15 clustered distinctly from known rhizobia species but within the R. leguminosarum complex (Rlc) with the most closely related species being R. indicum with 96.4% sequence identity. Similarly, strains 16PS2, 3PS9 and 3PS18 showed 97.4% and 97.6% similarity with R. sophorae and R. laguerreae, respectively. Based on 16S-23S intergenic spacer (IGS) fingerprinting, there was no clear association between the strains and their geographic locations. According to nodC and nodA phylogenies, strains of Rlc species and, interestingly, strain 8PS18 identified as E. meliloti, harbored the symbiotic genes of symbiovar viciae and clustered in two different clades showing heterogeneity within the symbiovar. All these strains nodulated and fixed nitrogen with pea plants. However, the strains belonging to A. radiobacter and the two remaining strains of E. meliloti were unable to nodulate P. sativum, suggesting that they were non-symbiotic strains. The results of this study further suggest that the Tunisian Rhizobium community is more diverse than previously reported.
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