Plant-Bacteria Association and Symbiosis: Are There Common Genomic Traits in Alphaproteobacteria?

Alphaproteobacteria show a great versatility in adapting to a broad range of environments and lifestyles, with the association between bacteria and plants as one of the most intriguing, spanning from relatively unspecific nonsymbiotic association (as rhizospheric or endophytic strains) to the highly...

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Main Authors: Alessio Mengoni, Francesco Pini, Marco Bazzicalupo, Marco Galardini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2011-11-01
Series:Genes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4425/2/4/1017/
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spelling doaj-d6e6034f0c2b4f8c9a46fbf80150d36f2020-11-24T23:08:38ZengMDPI AGGenes2073-44252011-11-01241017103210.3390/genes2041017Plant-Bacteria Association and Symbiosis: Are There Common Genomic Traits in Alphaproteobacteria?Alessio MengoniFrancesco PiniMarco BazzicalupoMarco GalardiniAlphaproteobacteria show a great versatility in adapting to a broad range of environments and lifestyles, with the association between bacteria and plants as one of the most intriguing, spanning from relatively unspecific nonsymbiotic association (as rhizospheric or endophytic strains) to the highly species-specific interaction of rhizobia. To shed some light on possible common genetic features in such a heterogeneous set of plant associations, the genomes of 92 Alphaproteobacteria strains were analyzed with a fuzzy orthologs-species detection approach. This showed that the different habitats and lifestyles of plant-associated bacteria (soil, plant colonizers, symbiont) are partially reflected by the trend to have larger genomes with respect to nonplant-associated species. A relatively large set of genes specific to symbiotic bacteria (73 orthologous groups) was found, with a remarkable presence of regulators, sugar transporters, metabolic enzymes, nodulation genes and several genes with unknown function that could be good candidates for further characterization. Interestingly, 15 orthologous groupspresent in all plant-associated bacteria (symbiotic and nonsymbiotic), but absent in nonplant-associated bacteria, were also found, whose functions were mainly related to regulation of gene expression and electron transport. Two of these orthologous groups were also detected in fully sequenced plant-associated Betaproteobacteria and Gammaproteobacteria. Overall these results lead us to hypothesize that plant-bacteria associations, though quite variable, are partially supported by a conserved set of unsuspected gene functions.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4425/2/4/1017/bacterial genomesplantsymbiosis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alessio Mengoni
Francesco Pini
Marco Bazzicalupo
Marco Galardini
spellingShingle Alessio Mengoni
Francesco Pini
Marco Bazzicalupo
Marco Galardini
Plant-Bacteria Association and Symbiosis: Are There Common Genomic Traits in Alphaproteobacteria?
Genes
bacterial genomes
plant
symbiosis
author_facet Alessio Mengoni
Francesco Pini
Marco Bazzicalupo
Marco Galardini
author_sort Alessio Mengoni
title Plant-Bacteria Association and Symbiosis: Are There Common Genomic Traits in Alphaproteobacteria?
title_short Plant-Bacteria Association and Symbiosis: Are There Common Genomic Traits in Alphaproteobacteria?
title_full Plant-Bacteria Association and Symbiosis: Are There Common Genomic Traits in Alphaproteobacteria?
title_fullStr Plant-Bacteria Association and Symbiosis: Are There Common Genomic Traits in Alphaproteobacteria?
title_full_unstemmed Plant-Bacteria Association and Symbiosis: Are There Common Genomic Traits in Alphaproteobacteria?
title_sort plant-bacteria association and symbiosis: are there common genomic traits in alphaproteobacteria?
publisher MDPI AG
series Genes
issn 2073-4425
publishDate 2011-11-01
description Alphaproteobacteria show a great versatility in adapting to a broad range of environments and lifestyles, with the association between bacteria and plants as one of the most intriguing, spanning from relatively unspecific nonsymbiotic association (as rhizospheric or endophytic strains) to the highly species-specific interaction of rhizobia. To shed some light on possible common genetic features in such a heterogeneous set of plant associations, the genomes of 92 Alphaproteobacteria strains were analyzed with a fuzzy orthologs-species detection approach. This showed that the different habitats and lifestyles of plant-associated bacteria (soil, plant colonizers, symbiont) are partially reflected by the trend to have larger genomes with respect to nonplant-associated species. A relatively large set of genes specific to symbiotic bacteria (73 orthologous groups) was found, with a remarkable presence of regulators, sugar transporters, metabolic enzymes, nodulation genes and several genes with unknown function that could be good candidates for further characterization. Interestingly, 15 orthologous groupspresent in all plant-associated bacteria (symbiotic and nonsymbiotic), but absent in nonplant-associated bacteria, were also found, whose functions were mainly related to regulation of gene expression and electron transport. Two of these orthologous groups were also detected in fully sequenced plant-associated Betaproteobacteria and Gammaproteobacteria. Overall these results lead us to hypothesize that plant-bacteria associations, though quite variable, are partially supported by a conserved set of unsuspected gene functions.
topic bacterial genomes
plant
symbiosis
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4425/2/4/1017/
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