3 resultados para Laguerre

em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid


Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

El uso intensivo de compuestos de cobre como herbicidas y fungicidas provoca la contaminación de suelos de uso agrícola debido a la acumulación de este metal en las capas más superficiales del suelo. Se sabe que la presencia de cobre y otros metales pesados afecta negativamente a las interacciones simbióticas que se establecen entre bacterias diazotróficas de los géneros Rhizobium, Sinorhizobium y Bradyrhizobium y leguminosas de interés agrícola (Laguerre et al., 2006). El objetivo de este trabajo es estudiar la diversidad de cepas endosimbióticas de leguminosas en suelos agrícolas chilenos que presentan un elevado contenido en cobre como resultado de la contaminación con residuos de extracciones mineras. Además, se pretende caracterizar el nivel de resistencia a cobre en las cepas aisladas con objeto de identificar aquellas altamente eficientes que puedan ser utilizadas como inoculantes microbianos. Para ello, se han prospectado 9 suelos agrícolas de las regiones III, V y VI de Chile con contenidos muy variables de metales. Utilizando estos suelos como inóculos de plantas trampa de leguminosas se ha obtenido una colección de 362 cepas aisladas de nódulos de guisante (Pisum sativum), judía (Phaseolus vulgaris) y alfalfa (Medicago sativa). Los análisis filogenéticos y los ensayos de resistencia a cobre realizados han permitido caracterizar y seleccionar aquellas cepas con mayores niveles de resistencia a este metal. Los resultados demuestran que los suelos altamente contaminados por cobre poseen una menor diversidad de bacterias endosimbióticas; las cepas más resistentes han sido aisladas de los suelos con niveles de contaminación intermedia. Los análisis fenotípicos y moleculares realizados sobre las cepas más resistentes han demostrado la existencia de sistemas de resistencia a cobre inducibles por este metal y potencialmente implicados en su homeostasis.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Rhizobium leguminosarum bv.viciae is able to establish nitrogen-fixing symbioses with legumes of the genera Pisum, Lens, Lathyrus and Vicia. Classic studies using trap plants (Laguerre et al., Young et al.) provided evidence that different plant hosts are able to select different rhizobial genotypes among those available in a given soil. However, these studies were necessarily limited by the paucity of relevant biodiversity markers. We have now reappraised this problem with the help of genomic tools. A well-characterized agricultural soil (INRA Bretennieres) was used as source of rhizobia. Plants of Pisum sativum, Lens culinaris, Vicia sativa and V. faba were used as traps. Isolates from 100 nodules were pooled, and DNA from each pool was sequenced (BGI-Hong Kong; Illumina Hiseq 2000, 500 bp PE libraries, 100 bp reads, 12 Mreads). Reads were quality filtered (FastQC, Trimmomatic), mapped against reference R. leguminosarum genomes (Bowtie2, Samtools), and visualized (IGV). An important fraction of the filtered reads were not recruited by reference genomes, suggesting that plant isolates contain genes that are not present in the reference genomes. For this study, we focused on three conserved genomic regions: 16S-23S rDNA, atpD and nodDABC, and a Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) analysis was carried out with meta / multigenomes from each plant. Although the level of polymorphism varied (lowest in the rRNA region), polymorphic sites could be identified that define the specific soil population vs. reference genomes. More importantly, a plant-specific SNP distribution was observed. This could be confirmed with many other regions extracted from the reference genomes (data not shown). Our results confirm at the genomic level previous observations regarding plant selection of specific genotypes. We expect that further, ongoing comparative studies on differential meta / multigenomic sequences will identify specific gene components of the plant-selected genotypes

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Most Rhizobium leguminosarum bv. viciae isolates are able to specifically nodulate plants of any of four different legume genera: Pisum, Lens, Vicia, and Lathyrus. However, previous evidence suggests that some genotypes are more adapted to a given plant host than others, and that the plant host can select specific genotypes among those present in a given soil population. We have used a population genomics approach to confirm that this is indeed the case, and to analyze the specific genotypic characteristics that each plant host selects