Sinorhiozbium bacteriophage HMSP1-Susan has a genome of 51,963 bp in size, with a GC content of 52.5%. It contains 97 putative coding sequences; 83% of these coding sequences (CDS) encode proteins classified as hypothetical or having unknown functions. HMSP1 has limited homology to previously reported viruses and likely represents a new phage that infects this nitrogen-fixing bacterium.
Bacteria of the genus Sinorhizobium are plant‐growth promoting microbes that form symbiotic relationships with legumes. These bacteria are important in agriculture because of their ability to convert atmospheric nitrogen gas to ammonia. Ammonia is used to synthesize proteins that are essential for plant growth. Bacteriophages are bacterial viruses that decrease microbial populations in soils and other environments. Despite extensive research on the molecular mechanisms governing the process of nitrogen fixation in Sinorhizobium, little is known about the biotic factors that influence the persistence of these bacteria in soil and impact their ability to fix nitrogen. The presence of bacteriophages in soils has been shown to select for specific types of Sinorhizobium strains and to affect the populations nitrogen‐fixing bacteria. In spite of this observation, there are only a limited number of Sinorhizobium phages that have been characterized. The goal of this project was to carry out a molecular characterization of phage HMSP‐1, a bacteriophage isolated from an agricultural soil that infects strains of Sinorhizobium. Viral DNA was isolated and used to obtain the complete nucleotide sequence of HMSP‐1. Genome analyses revealed that HMSP‐1 is a double stranded DNA virus of 52 kb in size. The genome has a GC content of 52.5% and encodes 96 proteins. 83% percent of these proteins were classified as hypothetical proteins of unknown function. HMSP‐1 did not have significant DNA sequence homology to known bacteriophages; these data suggest HMSP‐1 is novel bacterial virus. We investigated the effects of bacteriophage HMSP‐1 on plant growth and the numbers of Sinorhizobium associated with the model legume, Medicago truncatula. No significant differences in growth or microbial numbers were found between the plants exposed to the phage and unexposed the controls. These data suggest that under the conditions tested, HMSP‐1 does not affect the bacterial populations associated with Medicago truncatula.Support or Funding InformationThe work was supported by grant 1237993 from the National Science Foundation and the Hamline University Ridgeway Fund for Undergraduate Collaborative Research.This abstract is from the Experimental Biology 2018 Meeting. There is no full text article associated with this abstract published in The FASEB Journal.
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