Sinorhizobium meliloti 1021 is a soil bacterium that establishes a nitrogen-fixing symbiosis with the host plants
Medicago sativa (alfalfa) and
Medicago truncatula (reviewed in [
1,
2]). These plants are not only agriculturally important, but are also key model organisms for studying the symbiotic interaction between rhizobial bacteria and their plant hosts. The goals of this study are to increase our understanding of this process and provide practical insights that may lead to the production of more efficient symbiotic strains of rhizobia. Increasing the efficiency of symbiotic nitrogen fixation is important in that it reduces the need for industrial production of nitrogen fertilizers, which is extremely costly in terms of petroleum and natural gas. In 2007, the US applied 13 million tons of industrially-produced nitrogen fertilizer to crops [
3]. Fertilizers continue to be used to increase yields of legume crops [
3], demonstrating that there is considerable room for improvement in these symbiotic associations.
S. meliloti fixes nitrogen in root nodules formed by the host plant, converting dinitrogen gas to ammonia. The development of these nodules requires that several signals be exchanged between the plant and the rhizobial bacteria. Flavonoid compounds produced by host plants signal
S. meliloti to produce lipochitooligosaccharides called Nod factors (NFs) [
4]. NF activates multiple responses in host plants, including tight curling of root hairs that traps bacterial cells within the curl, and cell divisions in the root cortex, which establish the nodule primordium [
5,
6]. The bacteria invade and colonize the roots through structures called infection threads, which originate from microcolonies of bacteria trapped in the curled root hair cells [
1,
7]. New infection threads initiate at each cell layer, eventually delivering the bacteria to the inner plant cortex [
7]. There, the rhizobial bacteria are endocytosed by root cortical cells within individual compartments of host-cell membrane origin [
2,
8]. Within these compartments, signals provided by the plant and the low-oxygen environment induce the bacteria to differentiate into a form called a “bacteroid”, and to begin expressing nitrogenase, the nitrogen-fixing enzyme, and other factors that are required for the symbiosis [
9,
10].
Rhizobial fixation of dinitrogen requires not only the expression of nitrogenase (encoded by the genes
nifK and
nifD[
11]), but also the assembly of cofactors and large inputs of energy and reductant [
12]. Nitrogen fixation also requires a nitrogenase reductase, encoded by
nifH[
11]; iron-molybdenum cofactor biosynthesis proteins, encoded by
nifBnifE and
nifE; and electron transfer flavoproteins and ferredoxins (
fixA, fixB, fixC, fixX) [
13-
16]. Bacteroids also increase their respiration rate, increasing the expression of the
fixNOQP cytochrome c oxidase operons [
17-
20].
Many of the proteins required for nitrogen fixation are tightly regulated by oxygen-sensing systems and are produced by rhizobial bacteria only when they encounter a low-oxygen environment [
21]. Nitrogenase and some of the other factors involved in nitrogen fixation are extremely oxygen-sensitive [
22], thus their expression under inappropriate conditions would be ineffective. Even under microaerobic conditions, most rhizobial bacteria are not capable of nitrogen fixation in the free-living state [
23]. The reasons for this are not completely understood, though it is known that legumes of the inverted repeat-lacking clade (IRLC), such as alfalfa and
M. truncatula, which form indeterminate-type nodules, impose a specific differentiation program on the intracellular bacteria, most likely through the activity of plant-produced bioactive peptides [
9,
24]. Bacteroids also receive nutrients from the host plant, such as the carbon source malate [
25-
27]. Multiple bacterial cellular processes and differentiation programs contribute to the success of the symbiosis with host plants, and one of our goals is to use comparative genomics to predict previously uncharacterized
S. meliloti open reading frames (ORFs) that may be involved in these processes, to test these predictions, and understand the mechanisms involved. In other bacterial species, comparative genomics of bacterial strains has been useful in finding new genes that are involved in metabolic pathways and in identifying virulence factors that distinguish pathogenic strains from commensal strains (examples include: [
28,
29]). In this study, a comparison of ORFS from nitrogen-fixing, plant-host nodulating rhizobia with closely-related non-nitrogen-fixing bacteria has identified ORFs that are expressed by
Sinorhizobium meliloti within host plant nodules.