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Journal of Bacteriology, March 2000, p. 1706-1713, Vol. 182, No. 6
Program in Cellular and Molecular
Biology1 and Department of Plant
Pathology,2 University of
Wisconsin
Received 24 August 1999/Accepted 16 December 1999
RosR is a determinant of nodulation competitiveness and cell
surface characteristics of Rhizobium etli and has sequence
similarity to a family of transcriptional repressors. To understand how
RosR affects these phenotypes, we mutagenized a rosR mutant
derivative of R. etli strain CE3 with a
mini-Tn5 that contains a promoterless gusA gene
at one end, which acts as a transcriptional reporter. Using a
mass-mating technique, we introduced rosR into each mutant in trans and screened for mutants that expressed different
levels of
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Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Identification of Genes in the RosR Regulon of
Rhizobium etli
Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
-glucuronidase activity in the presence and absence of
rosR. A screen of 18,000 mutants identified 52 insertions
in genes negatively regulated by RosR and 1 insertion in a gene
positively regulated by RosR. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the
regions flanking the insertions suggests that RosR regulates genes of
diverse function, including those involved in polysaccharide production
and in carbohydrate metabolism and those in a region containing
sequence similarity to virC1 and virD3 from
Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Two of the mutants produced
colonies with altered morphology and were more competitive in
nodulation than was CE3
rosR, the rosR
parent. One mutant that contained an insertion in a gene with
similarity to exsH of Sinorhizobium meliloti
did not nodulate the plant host Phaseolus vulgaris without
rosR. These results indicate that RosR directly or
indirectly influences expression of diverse genes in R. etli, some of which affect the cell surface and nodulation competitiveness.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Dept. Plant
Pathology, University of Wisconsin
Madison, 1630 Linden Dr.,
Madison, WI 53706. Phone: (608) 263-8783. Fax: (608) 262-8643. E-mail:
joh{at}plantpath.wisc.edu.
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