Christina Kennedy
University of Arizona
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Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2001
Myrna Sevilla; Robert H. Burris; Nirmala Gunapala; Christina Kennedy
The ability of the nitrogen-fixing bacterial endophyte Acetobacter diazotrophicus strain PAl5 to enhance the growth of sugarcane SP70-1143 was evaluated in the growth chamber, greenhouse, and field by comparing plants inoculated with wild-type and Nif mutant MAd3A in two independent experiments. The wild-type and Nif mutant strains colonized sugarcane plants equally and persisted in mature plants. In N-deficient conditions, sugarcane plants inoculated with A. diazotrophicus PAl5 generally grew better and had a higher total N content 60 days after planting than did plants inoculated with mutant MAd3A or uninoculated plants. These results indicate that the transfer of fixed N from A. diazotrophicus to sugarcane might be a significant mechanism for plant growth promotion in this association. When N was not limiting, growth enhancement was observed in plants inoculated with either wild-type or Nif- mutants, suggesting the additional effect of a plant growth promoting factor provided by A. diazotrophicus. A 15N2 incorporation experiment demonstrated that A. diazotrophicus wild-type strains actively fixed N2 inside sugarcane plants, whereas the Nif- mutants did not.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2009
João C. Setubal; Patricia C. Dos Santos; Barry S. Goldman; Helga Ertesvåg; Guadelupe Espin; Luis M. Rubio; Svein Valla; Nalvo F. Almeida; Divya Balasubramanian; Lindsey Cromes; Leonardo Curatti; Zijin Du; Eric Godsy; Brad Goodner; Kaitlyn Hellner-Burris; Jose A. Hernandez; Katherine Houmiel; Juan Imperial; Christina Kennedy; Timothy J. Larson; Phil Latreille; Lauren S. Ligon; Jing Lu; Mali Mærk; Nancy M. Miller; Stacie Norton; Ina P. O'Carroll; Ian T. Paulsen; Estella C. Raulfs; Rebecca Roemer
Azotobacter vinelandii is a soil bacterium related to the Pseudomonas genus that fixes nitrogen under aerobic conditions while simultaneously protecting nitrogenase from oxygen damage. In response to carbon availability, this organism undergoes a simple differentiation process to form cysts that are resistant to drought and other physical and chemical agents. Here we report the complete genome sequence of A. vinelandii DJ, which has a single circular genome of 5,365,318 bp. In order to reconcile an obligate aerobic lifestyle with exquisitely oxygen-sensitive processes, A. vinelandii is specialized in terms of its complement of respiratory proteins. It is able to produce alginate, a polymer that further protects the organism from excess exogenous oxygen, and it has multiple duplications of alginate modification genes, which may alter alginate composition in response to oxygen availability. The genome analysis identified the chromosomal locations of the genes coding for the three known oxygen-sensitive nitrogenases, as well as genes coding for other oxygen-sensitive enzymes, such as carbon monoxide dehydrogenase and formate dehydrogenase. These findings offer new prospects for the wider application of A. vinelandii as a host for the production and characterization of oxygen-sensitive proteins.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2004
Sunhee Lee; M. Flores-Encarnación; M. Contreras-Zentella; L. Garcia-Flores; J. E. Escamilla; Christina Kennedy
Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus is an endophyte of sugarcane frequently found in plants grown in agricultural areas where nitrogen fertilizer input is low. Recent results from this laboratory, using mutant strains of G. diazotrophicus unable to fix nitrogen, suggested that there are two beneficial effects of G. diazotrophicus on sugarcane growth: one dependent and one not dependent on nitrogen fixation. A plant growth-promoting substance, such as indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), known to be produced by G. diazotrophicus, could be a nitrogen fixation-independent factor. One strain, MAd10, isolated by screening a library of Tn5 mutants, released only approximately 6% of the amount of IAA excreted by the parent strain in liquid culture. The mutation causing the IAA(-) phenotype was not linked to Tn5. A pLAFR3 cosmid clone that complemented the IAA deficiency was isolated. Sequence analysis of a complementing subclone indicated the presence of genes involved in cytochrome c biogenesis (ccm, for cytochrome c maturation). The G. diazotrophicus ccm operon was sequenced; the individual ccm gene products were 37 to 52% identical to ccm gene products of Escherichia coli and equivalent cyc genes of Bradyrhizobium japonicum. Although several ccm mutant phenotypes have been described in the literature, there are no reports of ccm gene products being involved in IAA production. Spectral analysis, heme-associated peroxidase activities, and respiratory activities of the cell membranes revealed that the ccm genes of G. diazotrophicus are involved in cytochrome c biogenesis.
Molecular Microbiology | 1993
Gonzalo Blanco; Martin Drummond; Paul Woodley; Christina Kennedy
In both Klebsiella pneumoniae and Azotobacter vinelandii the nifL gene, which encodes a negative regulator of nitrogen fixation, lies immediately upstream of nifA. We have sequenced the A. vinelandii nifL gene and found that it is more homologous in its C‐terminal domain to the histidine protein kinases (HPKs) than Is K. pneumoniae NifL. In particular A. vinelandii NifL contains a conserved histidine at a position shown to be phosphorylated in other systems. Both NifL proteins are homologous in their N‐termini to a part of the Halobacterium halobium bat gene product; Bat is involved in regulation of bacterio‐opsin, the expression of which is oxygen sensitive. The same region showed homology to the haembinding N‐terminai domain of the Rhizobium meliloti fixL gene product, an oxygen‐sensing protein. Like K. pneumoniae NifL, A. vinelandii NifL is shown here to prevent expression of nif genes in the presence of NH+4 or oxygen. The sequences found homologous in the C‐terminal regions of NifL, FixL and Bat might therefore be involved in oxygen binding or sensing. An in‐frame deletion mutation in the nifL coding region resulted in loss of repression by NH+4 and the mutant excreted high amounts of ammonia during nitrogen fixation, thus confirming a phenotype reported earlier for an insertion mutation. In addition, nifLA are cotranscribed in A. vinelandii as in K. pneumoniae, but expression from the A. vinelandii promoter requires neither RpoN nor NtrC.
FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2004
David A. Dalton; Sasha Kramer; Nico Azios; Suzanne Fusaro; Elizabeth Cahill; Christina Kennedy
Several tropical grasses harbor symbiotic nitrogen-fixing bacteria within their stem and rhizome tissue that may contribute to the nitrogen nutrition of the host plant. We present evidence here that sand dune grasses (Ammophila arenaria and Elymus mollis) from Oregon also contain nitrogen-fixing bacteria. Surface-sterilized stem and rhizome tissue from these species possess acetylene reduction (nitrogen fixation) activity and large populations (10(5) to 10(6) cfu/g fresh weight) of bacteria. These bacteria were cultured on N-free media and identified by sequencing of 16S rRNA genes or by GC-FAME. Random sequencing of numerous colonies from the initial isolation plates of mixed isolates showed that pseudomonads (Stenotrophomonas and Pseudomonas) were by far the most common microorganism. One isolate -Burkholderia sp. strain Aa1 - reduced acetylene in culture with maximum activity at an O(2) concentration of 2% (v/v) in liquid media or 10% on solid media. PCR screening of all the isolates with nifH and nifD primers was positive only for this species. Immunolocalization studies with antibodies to nitrogenase resulted in labeling within plant cell walls of stems and rhizomes. Evidence for a similar nitrogen-fixing association was also detected in Uniola paniculata (sea oats) and Ammophila brevigulata (American beachgrass). We conclude that these grasses, and probably other dune grasses from temperate climates, contain endophytic, diazotrophic bacteria that may contribute to the phenomenal success of these grasses on nutrient-poor sand.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2000
Sunhee Lee; Alexander Reth; Dietmar Meletzus; Myrna Sevilla; Christina Kennedy
A major 30.5-kb cluster of nif and associated genes of Acetobacter diazotrophicus (syn. Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus), a nitrogen-fixing endophyte of sugarcane, was sequenced and analyzed. This cluster represents the largest assembly of contiguous nif-fix and associated genes so far characterized in any diazotrophic bacterial species. Northern blots and promoter sequence analysis indicated that the genes are organized into eight transcriptional units. The overall arrangement of genes is most like that of the nif-fix cluster in Azospirillum brasilense, while the individual gene products are more similar to those in species of Rhizobiaceae or in Rhodobacter capsulatus.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2002
Paul Rudnick; Christopher Kunz; Malkanthi K. Gunatilaka; Eric R. Hines; Christina Kennedy
In several diazotrophic species of Proteobacteria, P(II) signal transduction proteins have been implicated in the regulation of nitrogen fixation in response to NH(4)(+) by several mechanisms. In Azotobacter vinelandii, expression of nifA, encoding the nif-specific activator, is constitutive, and thus, regulation of NifA activity by the flavoprotein NifL appears to be the primary level of nitrogen control. In vitro and genetic evidence suggests that the nitrogen response involves the P(II)-like GlnK protein and GlnD (uridylyltransferase/uridylyl-removing enzyme), which reversibly uridylylates GlnK in response to nitrogen limitation. Here, the roles of GlnK and GlnK-UMP in A. vinelandii were studied to determine whether the Nif (-) phenotype of glnD strains was due to an inability to modify GlnK, an effort previously hampered because glnK is an essential gene in this organism. A glnKY51F mutation, encoding an unuridylylatable form of the protein, was stable only in a strain in which glutamine synthetase activity is not inhibited by NH(4)(+), suggesting that GlnK-UMP is required to signal adenylyltransferase/adenylyl-removing enzyme-mediated deadenylylation. glnKY51F strains were significantly impaired for diazotrophic growth and expression of a nifH-lacZ fusion. NifL interacted with GlnK and GlnKY51F in a yeast two-hybrid system. Together, these data are consistent with those obtained from in vitro experiments (Little et al., EMBO J., 19:6041-6050, 2000) and support a model for regulation of NifA activity in which unmodified GlnK stimulates NifL inhibition and uridylylation of GlnK in response to nitrogen limitation prevents this function. This model is distinct from one proposed for the related bacterium Klebsiella pneumoniae, in which unmodified GlnK relieves NifL inhibition instead of stimulating it.
Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 1997
Paul Rudnick; Dietmar Meletzus; Andrew Green; Luhong He; Christina Kennedy
Abstract Nitrogenase enzyme is not synthesized in diazotrophs growing with a sufficient or excess supply of fixed nitrogen in their environment. In addition, in some bacteria the nitrogenase enzyme is inactivated by ammonium. The mechanisms by which cells respond to ammonium have been studied in several members of the Proteobacteria, including species from three of the four subgroups of this major taxon. In all of them, NifA is a transcriptional activator of expression of all other nif genes, the products of which are required for synthesis of active nitrogenase. NifA is either inactivated or not synthesized in ammonium-grown cultures of the Proteobacterial diazotrophs. The mechanisms by which NifA synthesis and activity are controlled by fixed nitrogen vary widely, as does the function of the PII protein, a major component of the nitrogen regulatory cascade, with respect to nitrogen fixation.
Archives of Microbiology | 1994
Jean Walmsley; Aresa Toukdarian; Christina Kennedy
Several regulatory gene mutants of Azotobacter vinelandii were tested for ability to synthesize functional nitrogenase-1 (Nif phenotype), nitrogenase-2 (Vnf), or nitrogenase-3 (Anf). While nifA mutants were Nif-, Vnf+, and Anf+/-, and ntrC mutants were Nif+, Vnf+, and Anf+, nifA ntrC double mutants were Nif-, Vnf-, and Anf-. A vnfA mutant was Nif+, Vnf+/-, and Anf+/-, and an anfA strain was Nif+, Vnf+, and Anf-. lacZ fusions in the nifH, vnfH, vnfD, anfH, and nifM genes of Azotobacter vinelandii were constructed and introduced into wild-type and regulatory mutants of A. vinelandii. Expression of these operons correlated with the growth phenotype of the regulatory mutants. Apparently either NifA or NtrC can activate expression of nifM. Also, expression of the anf operon required the NifA transcriptional activator, although there are no NifA binding sites at appropriate locations upstream of anfH (or anfA). The results confirm previous reports that VnfA and AnfA are required for expression of vnf and anf genes, respectively, and that VnfA is involved in repression of the nifHDK operon in the absence of molybdenum and of the anfHDGK operon in the presence of vanadium.
Microbiology | 2001
Rita Colnaghi; T. Paul Rudnick; Luhong He; Andrew Green; Dalai Yan; Ethan Larson; Christina Kennedy
GlnD is a pivotal protein in sensing intracellular levels of fixed nitrogen and has been best studied in enteric bacteria, where it reversibly uridylylates two related proteins, PII and GlnK. The uridylylation state of these proteins determines the activities of glutamine synthetase (GS) and NtrC. Results presented here demonstrate that glnD is an essential gene in Azotobacter vinelandii. Null glnD mutations were introduced into the A. vinelandii genome, but none could be stably maintained unless a second mutation was present that resulted in unregulated activity of GS. One mutation, gln-71, occurred spontaneously to give strain MV71, which failed to uridylylate the GlnK protein. The second, created by design, was glnAY407F (MV75), altering the adenylylation site of GS. The gln-71 mutation is probably located in glnE, encoding adenylyltransferase, because introducing the Escherichia coli glnE gene into MV72, a glnD(+) derivative of MV71, restored the regulation of GS activity. GlnK-UMP is therefore apparently required for GS to be sufficiently deadenylylated in A. vinelandii for growth to occur. The DeltaglnD GS(c) isolates were Nif(-), which could be corrected by introducing a nifL mutation, confirming a role for GlnD in mediating nif gene regulation via some aspect of the NifL/NifA interaction. MV71 was unexpectedly NtrC(+), suggesting that A. vinelandii NtrC activity might be regulated differently than in enteric organisms.
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Kátia Regina dos Santos Teixeira
Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária
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