4.4 Article

Identification, origin, and evolution of leaf nodulating symbionts of Sericanthe (Rubiaceae)

Journal

JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 6, Pages 935-941

Publisher

MICROBIOLOGICAL SOCIETY KOREA
DOI: 10.1007/s12275-011-1163-5

Keywords

Burkholderia; endosymbionts; bacterial leaf nodulation; Sericanthe; Rubiaceae

Categories

Funding

  1. King Leopold III Fund
  2. Fund for Scientific Research - Flanders (FWO)
  3. Institute for the Promotion of Innovation by Science and Technology in Flanders (IWT Vlaanderen) [71488]
  4. Fund for Scientific Research - Flanders (Belgium) (FWO - Vlaanderen) [G.0343.09N]
  5. K.U. Leuven [OT/05/35]

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Bacterial leaf symbiosis is an intimate association between bacteria and plants in which endosymbionts are housed within leaf nodules. This phenomenon has been reported in three genera of Rubiaceae (Pavetta, Psychotria, and Sericanthe), but the bacterial partner has only been identified in Psychotria and Pavetta. Here we report the identification of symbiotic bacteria in two leaf nodulating Sericanthe species. Using 16S rRNA data and common housekeeping genetic markers (recA and gyrB) we studied the phylogenetic relationships of bacterial endosymbionts in Rubiaceae. Endosymbionts of leaf nodulating Rubiaceae were found to be closely related and were placed as a monophyletic group within the genus Burkholderia (beta-Proteobacteria). The phylogenetic analyses revealed a pattern of strict host specificity and placed the two investigated endosymbionts at two distinct positions in the topology of the tree, suggesting at least two different evolutionary origins. The degree of sequence divergence between the Sericanthe endosymbionts and their relatives was large enough to propose the Sericanthe endosymbionts as new species ('Candidatus Burkholderia andongensis' and 'Candidatus Burkholderia petitii'). In a second part of this study, the pylogenetic relationships among nodulating and non-nodulating Sericanthe species were investigated using sequence data from six chloroplast regions (rps16, trnG, trnL-trnF, petD, petA-psbJ, and atpI-atpH). Overall, genetic variation among the plastid markers was insufficient to enable phylogenetic estimation. However, our results could not rule out the possibility that bacterial leaf symbiosis originated once in a common ancestor of the Sericanthe species.

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