Evolution of fixNOQP genes encoding cytochrome oxidase with high affinity to oxygen in rhizobia and related bacteria


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Abstract

Many bacteria belonging to the order Rhizobiales have fixNOQP genes which encode cytochrome oxidase with high affinity to oxygen required for oxidative phosphorylation in microaerophilic conditions. There is one copy of the identified fixNOQP operon in ancestral forms of rhizobia (Bradyrhizobium), as well as in their putative evolutionary predecessors (bacteria related to Rhodopseudomonas). At the same time, forms deeply specialized in symbiosis (Rhizobium leguminosarum, Sinorhizobium meliloti) have multiple (2–3) copies, some of them have a high similarity (>90%) to fixNOQP genes of Bradyrhizobium and Rhodopseudomonas, and others have only 30–50% similarity. Two divergent copies fixNOQP are detected in Tardiphaga, which is a representative of the Bradyrhizobiaceae family, lacking the ability to fix N2 (lack of nif genes encoding the synthesis of nitrogenase) and to induce the formation of nodules on legumes roots (lack of nod genes encoding the synthesis of signal Nod factors activating symbiosis development). The presence of Tardiphaga in nodule bacterial communities from a range of legumes, including Vavilovia formosa (relic representative of the tribe Fabeae, for which R. leguminosarum bv. viciae is the main microsymbiont), suggests that the ancestral gene duplication and subsequent divergence of fixNOQP operon in bacteria related to Tardiphaga opened the possibility of wide dissemination of functionally different copies of this cluster among symbiotically active forms of Rhizobiales. It is possible that the acquisition of fixNOQP genes determines adaptation of bacteria to microaerophilic niches not only in plants nodules but also in their environment (the rhizosphere, rhizoplane, internal portions of soil aggregates).

About the authors

V. V. Kopat

All-Russian Research Institute for Agricultural Microbiology

Author for correspondence.
Email: kopat.v.bio@gmail.com
Russian Federation, St. Petersburg, 196608

E. R. Chirak

All-Russian Research Institute for Agricultural Microbiology

Email: kopat.v.bio@gmail.com
Russian Federation, St. Petersburg, 196608

A. K. Kimeklis

All-Russian Research Institute for Agricultural Microbiology

Email: kopat.v.bio@gmail.com
Russian Federation, St. Petersburg, 196608

V. I. Safronova

All-Russian Research Institute for Agricultural Microbiology

Email: kopat.v.bio@gmail.com
Russian Federation, St. Petersburg, 196608

A. A. Belimov

All-Russian Research Institute for Agricultural Microbiology

Email: kopat.v.bio@gmail.com
Russian Federation, St. Petersburg, 196608

M. R. Kabilov

Institute of Chemical Biology and Fundamental Medicine, Siberian Branch

Email: kopat.v.bio@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Novosibirsk, 630090

E. E. Andronov

All-Russian Research Institute for Agricultural Microbiology; Department of Genetics and Selection; Dokuchaev Soil Science Institute

Email: kopat.v.bio@gmail.com
Russian Federation, St. Petersburg, 196608; St. Petersburg, 199034; Moscow, 119017

N. A. Provorov

All-Russian Research Institute for Agricultural Microbiology

Email: kopat.v.bio@gmail.com
Russian Federation, St. Petersburg, 196608

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