MBE Advance Access originally published online on April 6, 2005
Molecular Biology and Evolution 2005 22(6):1518-1528; doi:10.1093/molbev/msi144
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Dispersal and Evolution of the Sinorhizobium meliloti Group II RmInt1 Intron in Bacteria that Interact with Plants


* Grupo de Ecología Genética, Departamento de Microbiología del Suelo y Sistemas Simbióticos, Estación Experimental del Zaidín, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, calle Profesor Albareda 1, Granada, Spain; and
Laboratorium voor Microbiologie, Vakgroep Biochemie, Fysiologie, Microbiologie, Faculteit Wetenschappen, Universiteit Gent, Gent, Belgium
E-mail: ntoro{at}eez.csic.es.
| Abstract |
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Group II introns are both self-splicing RNAs and mobile retroelements found in bacterial and archaeal genomes and in organelles of eukaryotes. They are thought to be the ancestors of eukaryote spliceosomal introns and nonlong terminal repeat retrotransposons. We show here that RmInt1, a bacterial group II intron first described in the nitrogen-fixing symbiont of alfalfa (Medicago sativa) Sinorhizobium meliloti, is also present in other Sinorhizobium and Rhizobium species. The intron-homing sites in these species are IS elements of the ISRm2011-2 group as in S. meliloti, but ectopic insertion is also observed. We present evidence that these related bacteria have acquired RmInt1 by vertical inheritance from a common ancestor and by independent horizontal transfer events. We also show that RmInt1 is mobile in related taxa of bacteria that interact with plants and tends to evolve toward an inactive form by fragmentation, with loss of the 3' terminus including the intron-encoded protein. Our results provide an overview of the evolution and dispersion of a bacterial group II intron.
Key Words: group II intron RmInt1 nitrogen fixation legumes Sinorhizobium meliloti Rhizobiales ribozyme reverse transcriptase
| Introduction |
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Group II introns are self-splicing, mobile retroelements that splice via a lariat intermediate in a mechanism similar to that of spliceosomal introns (Michel and Ferat 1995
Nuclear premessenger RNA introns (Michel and Ferat 1995
) and nonlong terminal repeat retrotransposons are both thought to descend from mobile group II introns (Eickbush 1999
). According to this hypothesis, group II introns originated in bacteria and invaded the nucleus of a primitive eukaryote directly or from an organelle; they were then fragmented to form the spliceosome (Sharp 1991
). The horizontal transfer of a self-splicing group II intron from a cyanobacterium to the chloroplast genome of Euglena myxocylindracea was recently shown (Sheveleva and Hallick 2004
), suggesting that this process is still occurring in nature. In bacteria, the evidence for horizontal gene transfer events involving group II introns is fragmented and indirect, being based mostly on the finding that a particular class of intron is present in various host organisms and that a particular organism harbors various classes of intron. The Azotobacter vinelandii group II intron (Avi.groEL) provides an illustration of this. This intron has been inserted into the termination codon of the groEL coding sequence, and this insertion site is conserved in at least one other species of Azotobacter (Azotobacter chroococcum), suggesting intron transposition after divergence of the two taxa (Ferat, Le Gouar, and Michel 2003
). Another example is the group II introns found in Methanosarcina acetivorans and Methanosarcina mazei, which were probably acquired from eubacteria (Dai and Zimmerly 2003
; Toro 2003
).
RmInt1 was the first group II intron described in the order Rhizobiales. It was identified in Sinorhizobium meliloti, the nitrogen-fixing symbiont of alfalfa (Medicago sativa). The RmInt1 IEP, like those of many other bacterial group II introns, lacks the DNA-En and a cognate C-terminal DNA-binding domain (Martínez-Abarca, García-Rodríguez, and Toro 2000
; Zimmerly, Hausner, and Wu 2001
; Dai and Zimmerly 2002a
; San Filippo and Lambowitz 2002
; Toro 2003
). RmInt1 is nevertheless an efficient mobile element with a homing frequency (proportion of cells containing at least one homing event) approaching 100%, similar to that of fungal mitochondrial DNA introns and the lactococcal Ll.ltrB intron, inserting into 20%45% of recipient target plasmids (Martínez-Abarca, García-Rodríguez, and Toro 2000
; Jiménez-Zurdo et al. 2003
). This mobile intron also transposes to ectopic sites (Martínez-Abarca and Toro 2000b
; Muñoz, Villadas, and Toro 2001
). RmInt1, like other group II introns lacking the IEP En domain, may use a nascent lagging strand at DNA replication forks for priming (Martínez-Abarca et al. 2004
).
This study aimed to investigate the further spread of bacterial group II introns in nature and to trace their possible evolution and involvement in horizontal transfer events. We searched for the S. meliloti RmInt1 intron and investigated its distribution in related taxa of bacteria that interact with plants. We present evidence that Sinorhizobium species inherited RmInt1 vertically from a common ancestor within the order Rhizobiales, with subsequent gains and losses in the various species and that this intron has been transferred horizontally to some Rhizobium species. We show that intron moves efficiently to homing sites in related taxa and that it tends to be inactivated by fragmentation with loss of the 3' terminus. This study sheds light on the dispersal and evolution of bacterial group II introns in natural populations.
| Materials and Methods |
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Bacterial Strains, Media, and Growth Conditions
The bacterial species of the order Rhizobiales and the S. meliloti isolates used are listed in tables 1 and 3. Escherichia coli DH5
was routinely cultured at 37°C in Luria-Bertani medium (Sambrook, Fritsch, and Maniatis 1989
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DNA Hybridization and Fingerprinting
Total DNA was isolated according to standard protocols (Sambrook, Fritsch, and Maniatis 1989
DNA Sequencing and Inverse Polymerase Chain Reaction
Copies of RmInt1 were isolated from Sinorhizobium medicae DNA by BamHI digestion, electrophoresis in agarose gels, excision with the Perfectprep Gel Cleanup kit (Eppendorf AG, Hamburg, Germany), and hybridization with intron-derived probes (fig. 1A). DNA from the excised bands and DNA from strains with a single copy of RmInt1 were subjected to polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with primers GII.1 (5'-AAIAGICITGGTIGTGAGCG-3') and GII.4 (5'-TCTCGCAGAACIGTICGTGA-3') to amplify RmInt1. The resulting PCR fragments were inserted into the pGEM-T vector (Promega, Madison, Wis.) and sequenced with primers T7, SP6,
1, Int2, H3 (5'-GTATTGTTTGAAACAACTG-3'), and EB70 (5'-ATGGTGGTCAAGCAGATGA-3') (fig. 1). The internal sequence of fragmented introns from strains with a single copy was obtained by PCR with primers
1 and 18R.0, purification of the fragment with S300HR columns (Pharmacia, Little Chalfont, UK), and sequencing in an automatic laser fluorescent DNA sequencer using the same primers.
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The 5' and 3' exon junctions of insertion sites were identified by inverse PCR with divergently annealing primers. Total DNA from Rhizobium etli Viking 1, Sinorhizobium terangae ORS22, and Sinorhizobium adhaerens 5D19 was first digested with EcoRI; DNA from S. medicae RMO02 was digested with BamHI; and DNA from S. adhaerens LMG20582was digested with EcoRV. The exon 3' to complete introns was amplified with primers PR1000 (5'-GCGGAAGATTGTCAAACAGC-3') and ICF (5'-CTGTTCTCTCTGGCTGACTACG-3'), whereas the 5' exon and the exons from truncated introns were amplified with primers ICI (5'-AGGATGACGAAACGGTCCT-3') and H3. The products of the amplification reactions were sequenced directly as described above. DNA sequence editing, translation and analysis, and sequence similarity searches were carried out as previously described (Martínez-Abarca and Toro 2000b
Phylogenetic Analysis
Analyses were carried out with PHYLIP version 3.573c, using the programs Seqboot, DNAdist, Protdist, Neighbor, Protpars, DNAML, and Consense (Felsenstein 1995
). Sequences were aligned by ClustalW (http://bioweb.pasteur.fr). Reference 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequences were retrieved from European Molecular Biology Laboratory and aligned using Bionumerics (Applied Math); a distance matrix was obtained with Kimura-2 correction, and a neighbor-joining tree was generated with TreeCon (version 1.3b, Van de Peer and De Wachter 1994
). A bootstrap analysis of 500 replicate data sets was performed with the same program.
RmInt1 Mobility Assays
Donor (pKG2.5) and receptor pJB0.6s(+) plasmids were transferred successively from E. coli to the selected rhizobial strains by triparental mating, using the helper plasmid pRK2013 (Ditta et al. 1980
). Mobility of intron copies from the genome of S. terangae ORS22 and S. adhaerens 5D19 to the receptor plasmids pJB0.6s(+) and pJB0.6as (Martínez-Abarca et al. 2004
) was also tested. Homing events were analyzed as previously described (Martínez-Abarca, García-Rodríguez, and Toro 2000
; Martínez-Abarca et al. 2004
).
| Results |
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Presence and Distribution of RmInt1 in the Order Rhizobiales
We evaluated the presence and distribution of RmInt1 in the order Rhizobiales. We carried out Southern blotting for 172 isolates corresponding to 29 species, 7 genera, and 4 families of bacteria, all able to interact with plants (table 1). Two different RmInt1-derived DNA probesa 448-bp 5' intron probe and a 238-bp 3' intron ORF-probe (see fig. 1)were used in hybridization analysis to make it possible to distinguish between full-length and fragmented introns. We focused exclusively on strong hybridization signals corresponding to sequences displaying >85% sequence identity to RmInt1 at the DNA level, as shown by subsequent analyses (see below). Within the Rhizobiaceae, our hybridization data indicated that RmInt1 was present in the genus Sinorhizobium, in S. meliloti, S. medicae, S. adhaerens, and S. terangae. It was not detected in Sinorhizobium fredii, Sinorhizobium saheli, or in the reference strains of Sinorhizobium kostiense, Sinorhizobium arboris, Sinorhizobium xinjiangensis, and Sinorhizobium morelense. In the other branches of the Rhizobiaceae tested, this intron was detected only in R. etli and Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. phaseoli (see tables 1 and 2, fig. 2A and B). No band hybridizing with the RmInt1 probes was detected in bacteria of Phyllobacteriaceae, Bradyrhizobiaceae, or Hyphomicrobiaceae, although some of the bacteria of these families (e.g., Bradyrhizobium japonicum) harbor phylogenetically related introns (Dai and Zimmerly 2002a
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All the strains and field isolates of R. etli and R. leguminosarum bv. phaseoli harboring copies of RmInt1 generated positive hybridization signals with the 5' intron probe but not with the 3' intron ORF-probe. This implies that RmInt1 has lost the IEP or is generally truncated at the 3' terminus in these bacterial species (table 2). In Sinorhizobium, fragmented RmInt1 introns were also detected in S. medicae, S. adhaerens, and S. meliloti, as shown by the smaller number of hybridizing bands obtained with the RmInt1 3' intron ORF-probe than with the 5' intron probe (table 2). After S. meliloti, RmInt1 appears to be most frequent in the related species S. medicae (seven of eight strains tested), but most of the copies detected appeared to be truncated at the 3' terminus (table 2). A larger study on 19 different S. meliloti isolates (table 3) suggested that RmInt1 is present predominantly in its full-length form in this bacterial species, confirming genome sequence data for strain 1021 showing the presence of three full-length copies of RmInt1 and no fragmented copies of this intron (Galibert et al. 2001
The Full-Length Rhizobiaceae RmInt1 Intron
We also studied strains from species other than S. meliloti, with the aim of characterizing the full-length copies of the RmInt1 intron and obtaining the corresponding DNA sequence. Total DNA from strains harboring more than one copy of the intron was digested with BamHI, a restriction enzyme that does not cut within the intron, and hybridized with the intron-derived probes. Southern blots suggested that S. medicae RMO09 harbored at least three full-length copies of the intron (fig. 2A). Sinorhizobium terangae strains ORS22 and ORS1009 and the S. adhaerens strain 5D19 gave single hybridizing bands of different sizes with the intron-derived probes, suggesting that these strains contained a single full-length copy of RmInt1 (data not shown). DNA corresponding to the 20- and 7.5-kb hybridizing bands from S. medicae (fig. 2A) were excised and purified from an agarose gel and subjected to PCR with the intron-derived primers GII.1 and GII.4 (fig. 1A). We also performed PCR with the same primers plus total DNA from S. terangae strains ORS22 and ORS1009 and sequenced S. adhaerens DNA with the intron-derived primers to obtain overlapping sequences (see fig. 1A). Finally, a partial DNA sequence (1,6041,717 nt) was obtained for each RmInt1 intron copy, including the complete dIV sequence (fig. 1B). The full-length intron sequence (1,884 nt) and exon sequences were obtained for the S. adhaerens 5D19 and S. terangae ORS22 RmInt1 elements by inverse PCR (fig. 1B). DNA sequence data showed that the S. medicae RmInt1 element located in the 20-kb BamHI fragment (hereafter referred to as copy 1) and that within the 7.5-kb BamHI fragment (copy 2) were 99% identical to S. meliloti RmInt1 (strain GR4). Identities of 93% were obtained for the intron in S. adhaerens and of 89% and 85% for the RmInt1 elements in S. terangae strains ORS22 and ORS1009, respectively. Most of the nucleotide changes were silent and those resulting in amino acid changes in the IEP were mostly clustered in the interdomains or in the spacers within the RT domain. Within the ribozyme, most of the observed nucleotide changes were complementary and therefore did not alter the predicted secondary structure of the ribozyme. Nevertheless, it should be noted that S. medicae RmInt1 copy 1 has four nucleotide changes and lacks a G at position 792 that results in a frameshift mutation, producing a stop codon at position 842, resulting in a truncated IEP of 98 amino acids (fig. 1B), whereas copy 2 has only one nucleotide change. The intron in S. terangae ORS1009 has a truncated IEP of 325 amino acids due to a stop codon generated in the maturase domain at position 1540 and a deletion of 18 nt that results in the loss of six amino acid residues at the start of the RT 0 domain (fig. 1B). Thus, at least some of the full-length RmInt1 introns appear to have become inactive in their hosts. Moreover, mobility assays using target recipient plasmids did not show homing events for the S. terangae ORS22 and S. adhaerens 5D19 introns (data not shown).
Phylogenetic Analyses of the Rhizobiaceae RmInt1 IEP
We investigated the evolutionary relationships between the RmInt1 introns found in the various hosts from the Rhizobiaceae by aligning the amino acid sequences of RmInt1 IEP copies obtained and correcting sequences to obtain a full IEP when required. Phylogenetic trees were constructed by neighbor-joining (fig. 3A) and parsimony analysis. Similar branching patterns were obtained with these algorithms. Phylogenetic analysis identified two main groups well supported by bootstrapping analysis: one including the RmInt1 IEPs from S. meliloti, S. medicae, and S. adhaerens, (hereafter referred to as the S. meliloti group) and the second containing the two RmInt1 IEPs found in S. terangae strains (hereafter referred to as the S. terangae group). The RmInt1 IEPbased phylogenetic tree was consistent with that based on 16S rDNA sequences (fig. 3C). Thus, the RmInt1 intron in these Sinorhizobium species may have been vertically inherited from a common ancestor, with intron loss in several species, or by horizontal transfer among closely related strains and species.
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The Fragmented Rhizobiaceae RmInt1 Intron
The results presented above suggest that RmInt1 tends to evolve into fragmented forms by truncation at its 3' terminus, resulting in the abolition of IEP activity and intron mobility. A previous report (Bittinger et al. 2000
1 and 18R.0. The 5' end of the intron and the 5' exon sequences of S.md.F1, R.et.F2, and S.ad.F1 were then obtained by inverse PCR (see Materials and Methods). Similarly, the 3' end of the intron and sequences further downstream were obtained for the S.md.F1 intron. Sequence analyses showed 90% similarity to RmInt1 from S. meliloti strain GR4 for R.et.F2 and 93% similarity for both S.md.F1 and S.ad.F1 (fig. 1C). R.et.F2 carries a deletion of 89 nt in the RT domain coding sequence. A blast nucleotide search of databases for R.et.F2 homologs revealed the presence in R. etli strain CFN42 of an almost identical (99% identity) fragmented intron copy harbored by plasmid p42d (González et al. 2003
Phylogenetic Analysis of the Rhizobiaceae RmInt1 Ribozyme
The ribozyme sequences of all introns (full-length and fragmented) were aligned from nucleotide positions 180 to 550 (determined for all introns in this study), including part of RmInt1 ribozyme dI and extending to the beginning of dIV, before the IEP coding region. This alignment was used to generate a phylogenetic tree using neighbor-joining (fig. 3B) and maximum likelihood algorithms. The branching of this tree was similar to that obtained with the IEP, with two main groups identified (fig. 3B). Surprisingly, R.et.F1 and R.et.F2 clustered with the S. terangae RmInt1 copies (see fig. 3B and C). Comparison of the ribozyme domain nucleotide sequences showed identical changes in the S. terangae and R. etli RmInt1 introns (fig. 4A and B). These results suggest that the truncated copies of RmInt1 in R. etli and the full-length intron of S. terangae share a common origin.
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Analysis of the RmInt1 Flanking Regions
In S. meliloti, RmInt1 is mainly associated with ISRm2011-2 and, to a lesser extent, with related elements (ISRm10-1, ISRm10-2) of the ISRm2011-2 group within the IS630-Tc1/IS3 insertion sequence family (Martínez-Abarca and Toro 2000b
The S. adhaerens 5D19 intron is inserted into a new IS of the ISRm2011-2 group, ISRm10-3, which is present as two copies in this bacterial genome. One of the copies is intron free and the insertion of RmInt1 may therefore correspond to a genuine retrohoming event. ISRm10-3 was absent from all the other strains tested, as indicated by DNA hybridization (table 2). These results confirm previous observations in S. meliloti of a specific association between RmInt1 and a particular class of IS elements favoring the spread of this intron in related taxa of the Rhizobiaceae. In contrast, the fragmented introns of S. medicae RMO02 (S.md.F1) and S. adhaerens LMG20582(S.ad.F1) seem be located in unknown ORFs or outside of coding regions as no homologs were found in databases (fig. 5). Analysis of the nucleotides essential for RmInt1 target recognition (Jiménez-Zurdo et al. 2003
) in the 5' exon of the S.md.F1 intron showed that neither the T-15 critical position in the 5' distal exon nor the IBS2 sequence and critical A-3 position in IBS1 are conserved (fig. 5). Thus, the original insertion events for both copies of the RmInt1 intron were probably ectopic transposition events rather than cases of retrohoming.
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Mobility of RmInt1 in Rhizobial Hosts
RmInt1 invades targets in a site-specific manner, by means of an RNA intermediate (retrohoming) (Martínez-Abarca et al. 2004
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| Discussion |
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The group II intron RmInt1 was first described in S. meliloti following analysis of the sequence of pRmeGR4b from GR4, a strain that contains nine copies of this element (Martínez-Abarca, Zekri, and Toro 1998
RmInt1 is present in 90% of S. meliloti isolates (Muñoz, Villadas, and Toro 2001
) and is an active and efficient retroelement in this bacterial host. In this study, we also found copies of RmInt1 (full-length and fragmented copies) in other Sinorhizobium species (S. medicae, S. adhaerens, and S. terangae), whereas only fragmented copies were present in Rhizobium species, such as R. etli and R. leguminosarum bv. phaseoli. Both these species nodulate and fix nitrogen in a similar ecological niche, the root nodules elicited on the leguminous plant Phaseolus vulgaris. Sequence data and phylogenetic analysis suggest that RmInt1 is native to the genus Sinorhizobium, in which it appears to have been inherited vertically from a common ancestor or by horizontal transfer among closely related strains and species but possibly lost in various species. Our results also suggest that the RmInt1 intron copies in R. etli and R. leguminosarum bv. phaseoli share a common origin with the S. terangae RmInt1 intron. RmInt1 may have been present in an ancestor of the Rhizobiaceae family but are lost in most of the lineages giving rise to the various genera. Alternatively, the RmInt1 intron of R. etli and R. leguminosarum bv. phaseoli may have been acquired by lateral transfer from Sinorhizobium species. The vertical inheritance hypothesis seems to be the least plausible because it involves evolutionary convergence of the Rhizobium and S. terangae RmInt1 introns. Sinorhizobium terangae and other Sinorhizobium species have full-length introns, whereas only fragmented introns that had accumulated larger numbers of mutations were found in Rhizobium. However, most of the R. etli and R. leguminosarum bv phaseoli strains isolated from different geographical origins harbored truncated RmInt1 copies. An early transfer event before the divergence of these two rhizobial species may account for these findings.
RmInt1 is currently very successful in S. meliloti because of the presence of host mobile DNA of the ISRm2011-2 group, which provides a site-specific target and facilitates the survival and spread of the intron. Studies on natural field populations of S. meliloti have shown that the RmInt1 intron spread not only by transposition of the host mobile DNA but also by independent movement of the intron (Muñoz, Villadas, and Toro 2001
). Similar conclusions have been drawn concerning the independent mobility of group II introns in E. coli populations, in studies of group II introns in the ECOR collection (Dai and Zimmerly 2002b
), and experimental demonstrations of conjugation-mediated transfer of the LltrB group II intron between bacterial species (Belhocine, Plante, and Cousineau 2004
). RmInt1 spreads by retrohoming or ectopic transposition, a conclusion also supported by this work. An analysis of flanking exon sequences suggested that in some cases intron insertion may have involved an ectopic transposition event, and the mobility assay data indicated that RmInt1 displays retrohoming in bacterial species and genera other than S. meliloti.
It has been reported that bacterial group II introns degenerate mainly by fragmentation (Dai and Zimmerly 2002a
). It has been reported that 38% of the described bacterial intron fragments are 5' truncated (Dai and Zimmerly 2002a
), possibly due to incomplete reverse transcription after intron RNA insertion. Interestingly, we found that RmInt1 tended to degenerate by means of truncation at its 3' terminus. In at least one case (R.et.F1), fragmentation may have occurred by insertion of an IS (ISRm3) with further rearrangements and deletion. In other cases (R.et.F2), the intron displayed internal deletions. Similar data have been reported for other bacterial group II introns, such as E. coli intron E.c.I4 (Dai and Zimmerly 2002b
), and this may be a general mechanism for the generation of 3'-truncated fragmented introns.
Our results provide further evidence that bacterial group II introns are able to propagate by vertical and lateral transfer, retrohoming, or ectopic transposition and show that they tend to evolve into fragmented introns, mechanisms underlying the origin of eukaryotic spliceosomal introns.
| Acknowledgements |
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The authors thank all the donors of strains and isolates for their invaluable generosity. This work was supported as part of research projects BIO99-0905 and BIO2002-02579 by the Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología. E.M.-A. was funded by Junta de Andalucía. M.F.-L. received postdoctoral grants from the Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología. A.W. would like to thank the Fund for Scientific ResearchFlanders for her postdoctoral research fellowship. The R. etlim CFN42 was provided by Dr. V. González.
| Footnotes |
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Pierre Capy, Associate Editor
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129 (even lanes). Fragments detected by hybridization are indicated as follows: D, donor plasmid; R, recipient; H, homing product at the right of the gel, and molecular mass markers are indicated on the left. The following strains were used: Sinorhizobium meliloti GR4, lanes 1 and 2; Sinorhizobium medicae RMO15, lanes 3 and 4; Sinorhizobium terangae ORS19, lanes 5 and 6; Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. phaseoli Ro33, lanes 7 and 8; Rhizobium tropici B BR850, lanes 9 and 10; Agrobacterium rhizogenes 163c1, lanes 11 and 12; and Agrobacterium tumefaciens B6, lanes 13 and 14.
