Phenotypic heterogeneity in Bradyrhizobium diazoefficiens USDA 110

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Abstract

Bacteria growing in liquid culture are assumed to be homogenous in phenotype. Characterization of individual cells shows that some clonal cultures contain more than one phenotype. Bacteria appear to employ bet hedging where various phenotypes help the species survive through environmental fluctuations. We asked whether the agriculturally significant bacterium Bradyrhizobium diazoefficiens USDA 110, which fixes nitrogen with soybean plants, displays phenotypic heterogeneity. We employed Percoll TM density gradient centrifugation to separate clonal populations of exponential and stationary phase B. diazoefficiens into four fractions and characterized their phenotype by proteomics. Specific phenotypes were then characterized in detail. Fractions varied by cell size, PHA content, lectin binding profile, growth rate, cellular ATP, chemotaxis, and respiration activity. Phenotypes were not heritable because the specific buoyant densities of fractions equilibrated within 10 generations. We propose that heterogeneity helps slow growing B. diazoefficiens proliferate and maintain populations in the different environments in soil and the rhizosphere.

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