Literature DB >> 15579380

Population genetics and phylogenetic inference in bacterial molecular systematics: the roles of migration and recombination in Bradyrhizobium species cohesion and delineation.

Pablo Vinuesa1, Claudia Silva, Dietrich Werner, Esperanza Martínez-Romero.   

Abstract

A combination of population genetics and phylogenetic inference methods was used to delineate Bradyrhizobium species and to uncover the evolutionary forces acting at the population-species interface of this bacterial genus. Maximum-likelihood gene trees for atpD, glnII, recA, and nifH loci were estimated for diverse strains from all but one of the named Bradyrhizobium species, and three unnamed "genospecies," including photosynthetic isolates. Topological congruence and split decomposition analyses of the three housekeeping loci are consistent with a model of frequent homologous recombination within but not across lineages, whereas strong evidence was found for the consistent lateral gene transfer across lineages of the symbiotic (auxiliary) nifH locus, which grouped strains according to their hosts and not by their species assignation. A well resolved Bayesian species phylogeny was estimated from partially congruent glnII+recA sequences, which is highly consistent with the actual taxonomic scheme of the genus. Population-level analyses of isolates from endemic Canarian genistoid legumes based on REP-PCR genomic fingerprints, allozyme and DNA polymorphism analyses revealed a non-clonal and slightly epidemic population structure for B. canariense isolates of Canarian and Moroccan origin, uncovered recombination and migration as significant evolutionary forces providing the species with internal cohesiveness, and demonstrated its significant genetic differentiation from B. japonicum, its sister species, despite their sympatry and partially overlapped ecological niches. This finding provides strong evidence for the existence of well delineated species in the bacterial world. The results and approaches used herein are discussed in the context of bacterial species concepts and the evolutionary ecology of (brady)rhizobia.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15579380     DOI: 10.1016/j.ympev.2004.08.020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Phylogenet Evol        ISSN: 1055-7903            Impact factor:   4.286


  63 in total

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3.  Recombination in Thermotoga: implications for species concepts and biogeography.

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Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2005-12-01       Impact factor: 4.562

Review 4.  Biogeography: an emerging cornerstone for understanding prokaryotic diversity, ecology, and evolution.

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6.  In situ phylogenetic structure and diversity of wild Bradyrhizobium communities.

Authors:  J L Sachs; S W Kembel; A H Lau; E L Simms
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2009-05-29       Impact factor: 4.792

7.  Abundance and diversity of soybean-nodulating rhizobia in black soil are impacted by land use and crop management.

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8.  Patterns of nucleotide diversity of the ldpA circadian gene in closely related species of cyanobacteria from extreme cold deserts.

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9.  Extreme conservation and non-neutral evolution of the cpmA Circadian locus in a globally distributed Chroococcidiopsis sp. from naturally stressful habitats.

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10.  Genetic diversity of native bradyrhizobia isolated from soybeans (Glycine max L.) in different agricultural-ecological-climatic regions of India.

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