METHODS AND COMPOSITIONS FOR IMPROVING PLANT TRAITS
20240010576 ยท 2024-01-11
Assignee
Inventors
- Karsten Temme (Oakland, CA)
- Alvin Tamsir (San Francisco, CA)
- Sarah Bloch (Emeryville, CA, US)
- Rosemary CLARK (Berkeley, CA, US)
- Emily Tung (Millbrae, CA)
Cpc classification
C05F11/08
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N9/80
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N9/0095
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C05F11/08
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C05C3/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N9/80
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N9/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
Disclosed herein are methods of increasing nitrogen fixation in a non-leguminous plant. The methods can comprise exposing the plant to a plurality of bacteria. Each member of the plurality comprises one or more genetic variations introduced into one or more genes or non-coding polynucleotides of the bacteria's nitrogen fixation or assimilation genetic regulatory network, such that the bacteria are capable of fixing atmospheric nitrogen in the presence of exogenous nitrogen. The bacteria are not intergeneric microorganisms. Additionally, the bacteria, in planta, produce 1% or more of the fixed nitrogen in the plant.
Claims
1.-143. (canceled)
144. A method of increasing the amount of atmospheric derived nitrogen in a plant in a field, the method comprising: exposing the plant in the field to a plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria, thereby increasing an amount of atmospheric derived nitrogen within the plant that is exposed to the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria relative to a plant that is exposed to a same amount of a second plurality of a non-engineered diazotrophic bacteria that are the same species as the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria; wherein the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria comprises at least one genetic variation introduced into a nitrogen fixation genetic regulatory network that results in one or more of: increased expression or activity of NifA or decreased expression or activity of NifL, wherein at least one genetic variation introduced into the nitrogen fixation genetic regulatory network comprises insertion of a heterologous sequence found within a genome of a bacterium of the genus of the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria; and wherein nitrogen fixation activity of the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria in non-nitrogen-limiting conditions is greater than nitrogen fixation activity, in similar non-nitrogen-limiting conditions, of a same amount of the second plurality of non-engineered diazotrophic bacteria.
145. The method of claim 144, wherein the engineered diazotrophic bacteria further comprise at least one genetic variation introduced into a nitrogen assimilation genetic regulatory network.
146. The method of claim 144, wherein the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria is applied into furrows in which seeds of the plant are planted.
147. The method of claim 144, wherein the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria is coated onto a seed of the plant.
148. The method of claim 144, wherein the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria colonizes at least a root of the plant such that the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria is present in the plant in an amount of at least 10.sup.5 colony forming units per gram fresh weight of tissue.
149. The method of claim 144, wherein the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria, in planta, excretes nitrogen-containing products of nitrogen fixation.
150. The method of claim 144, wherein the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria, in planta, produces at least 1% of fixed nitrogen in the plant.
151. The method of claim 150, wherein the fixed nitrogen in the plant produced by the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria is measured by dilution of .sup.15N in the plants grown in fields treated with fertilizer containing 1.2% .sup.15N.
152. The method of claim 144, wherein the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria is engineered using at least one type of engineering selected from the group consisting of directed mutagenesis and random mutagenesis.
153. The method of claim 144, wherein nitrogen fixation activity of the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria in non-nitrogen-limiting conditions is greater than nitrogen fixation activity, in the same non-nitrogen-limiting conditions, of about the same amount of a plurality of non-engineered diazotrophic bacteria that is of a same species as the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria.
154. The method of claim 144, wherein the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria is selected from the group consisting of epiphytic diazotrophic bacteria, endophytic diazotrophic bacteria, and rhizospheric diazotrophic bacteria.
155. The method of claim 144, wherein the heterologous sequence is a heterologous regulatory sequence.
156. The method of claim 144, wherein the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria is intrageneric.
157. The method of claim 144, wherein the genetic material of the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria consists essentially of genetic material from bacteria of the same genus of the plurality of engineered diazotrophic bacteria.
158. The method of claim 144, wherein the plant is a non-leguminous plant.
159. The method of claim 144, wherein the plant is a cereal plant.
160. The method of claim 144, wherein the plant is selected from maize, rice, wheat, barley, sorghum, millet, oats, rye triticale, buckwheat, corn, sugar cane, onion, tomato, strawberry, and asparagus.
161. The method of claim 144, wherein the plant is selected from pineapple, banana, coconut, lily, grass, peas, alfalfa, tomatillo, melon, chickpea, chicory, clover, kale, lentil, soybean, tobacco, potato, sweet potato, radish, cabbage, rape, apple trees, grape, cotton, sunflower, thale cress, canola, pepper, bean, and lettuce.
162. The method of claim 144, wherein the plant a citrus plant.
163. The method of claim 162, wherein the citrus plant is selected from an orange plant, a mandarin plant, a kumquat plant, a lemon plant, a lime plant, a grapefruit plant, a tangerine plant, a tangelo plant, a citron plant, and a pomelo plant.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0034] The novel features of the invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claims. A better understanding of the features and advantages of the present invention will be obtained by reference to the following detailed description that sets forth illustrative embodiments, in which the principles of the invention are utilized, and the accompanying drawings of which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0056] The terms polynucleotide, nucleotide, nucleotide sequence, nucleic acid and oligonucleotide are used interchangeably. They refer to a polymeric form of nucleotides of any length, either deoxyribonucleotides or ribonucleotides, or analogs thereof. Polynucleotides may have any three dimensional structure, and may perform any function, known or unknown. The following are non-limiting examples of polynucleotides: coding or non-coding regions of a gene or gene fragment, loci (locus) defined from linkage analysis, exons, introns, messenger RNA (mRNA), transfer RNA (tRNA), ribosomal RNA (rRNA), short interfering RNA (siRNA), short-hairpin RNA (shRNA), micro-RNA (miRNA), ribozymes, cDNA, recombinant polynucleotides, branched polynucleotides, plasmids, vectors, isolated DNA of any sequence, isolated RNA of any sequence, nucleic acid probes, and primers. A polynucleotide may comprise one or more modified nucleotides, such as methylated nucleotides and nucleotide analogs. If present, modifications to the nucleotide structure may be imparted before or after assembly of the polymer. The sequence of nucleotides may be interrupted by non-nucleotide components. A polynucleotide may be further modified after polymerization, such as by conjugation with a labeling component.
[0057] Hybridization refers to a reaction in which one or more polynucleotides react to form a complex that is stabilized via hydrogen bonding between the bases of the nucleotide residues. The hydrogen bonding may occur by Watson Crick base pairing, Hoogstein binding, or in any other sequence specific manner according to base complementarity. The complex may comprise two strands forming a duplex structure, three or more strands forming a multi stranded complex, a single self-hybridizing strand, or any combination of these. A hybridization reaction may constitute a step in a more extensive process, such as the initiation of PCR, or the enzymatic cleavage of a polynucleotide by an endonuclease. A second sequence that is complementary to a first sequence is referred to as the complement of the first sequence. The term hybridizable as applied to a polynucleotide refers to the ability of the polynucleotide to form a complex that is stabilized via hydrogen bonding between the bases of the nucleotide residues in a hybridization reaction.
[0058] Complementarity refers to the ability of a nucleic acid to form hydrogen bond(s) with another nucleic acid sequence by either traditional Watson-Crick or other non-traditional types. A percent complementarity indicates the percentage of residues in a nucleic acid molecule which can form hydrogen bonds (e.g., Watson-Crick base pairing) with a second nucleic acid sequence (e.g., 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 out of 10 being 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 90%, and 100% complementary, respectively). Perfectly complementary means that all the contiguous residues of a nucleic acid sequence will hydrogen bond with the same number of contiguous residues in a second nucleic acid sequence. Substantially complementary as used herein refers to a degree of complementarity that is at least 60%, 65%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 95%, 97%, 98%, 99%, or 100% over a region of 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, or more nucleotides, or refers to two nucleic acids that hybridize under stringent conditions. Sequence identity, such as for the purpose of assessing percent complementarity, may be measured by any suitable alignment algorithm, including but not limited to the Needleman-Wunsch algorithm (see e.g. the EMBOSS Needle aligner available at www.ebi.ac.uk/Tools/psa/emboss needle/nucleotide.html, optionally with default settings), the BLAST algorithm (see e.g. the BLAST alignment tool available at blast.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/Blast.cgi, optionally with default settings), or the Smith-Waterman algorithm (see e.g. the EMBOSS Water aligner available at www.ebi.ac.uk/Tools/psa/emboss_water/nucleotide.html, optionally with default settings). Optimal alignment may be assessed using any suitable parameters of a chosen algorithm, including default parameters.
[0059] In general, stringent conditions for hybridization refer to conditions under which a nucleic acid having complementarity to a target sequence predominantly hybridizes with a target sequence, and substantially does not hybridize to non-target sequences. Stringent conditions are generally sequence-dependent, and vary depending on a number of factors. In general, the longer the sequence, the higher the temperature at which the sequence specifically hybridizes to its target sequence. Non-limiting examples of stringent conditions are described in detail in Tijssen (1993), Laboratory Techniques In Biochemistry And Molecular Biology-Hybridization With Nucleic Acid Probes Part I, Second Chapter Overview of principles of hybridization and the strategy of nucleic acid probe assay, Elsevier, N.Y.
[0060] As used herein, expression refers to the process by which a polynucleotide is transcribed from a DNA template (such as into and mRNA or other RNA transcript) and/or the process by which a transcribed mRNA is subsequently translated into peptides, polypeptides, or proteins. Transcripts and encoded polypeptides may be collectively referred to as gene product. If the polynucleotide is derived from genomic DNA, expression may include splicing of the mRNA in a eukaryotic cell.
[0061] The terms polypeptide, peptide and protein are used interchangeably herein to refer to polymers of amino acids of any length. The polymer may be linear or branched, it may comprise modified amino acids, and it may be interrupted by non amino acids. The terms also encompass an amino acid polymer that has been modified; for example, disulfide bond formation, glycosylation, lipidation, acetylation, phosphorylation, or any other manipulation, such as conjugation with a labeling component. As used herein the term amino acid includes natural and/or unnatural or synthetic amino acids, including glycine and both the D or L optical isomers, and amino acid analogs and peptidomimetics.
[0062] As used herein, the term about is used synonymously with the term approximately. Illustratively, the use of the term about with regard to an amount indicates that values slightly outside the cited values, e.g., plus or minus 0.1% to 10%.
[0063] The term biologically pure culture or substantially pure culture refers to a culture of a bacterial species described herein containing no other bacterial species in quantities sufficient to interfere with the replication of the culture or be detected by normal bacteriological techniques.
[0064] Plant productivity refers generally to any aspect of growth or development of a plant that is a reason for which the plant is grown. For food crops, such as grains or vegetables, plant productivity can refer to the yield of grain or fruit harvested from a particular crop. As used herein, improved plant productivity refers broadly to improvements in yield of grain, fruit, flowers, or other plant parts harvested for various purposes, improvements in growth of plant parts, including stems, leaves and roots, promotion of plant growth, maintenance of high chlorophyll content in leaves, increasing fruit or seed numbers, increasing fruit or seed unit weight, reducing NO.sub.2 emission due to reduced nitrogen fertilizer usage and similar improvements of the growth and development of plants.
[0065] Microbes in and around food crops can influence the traits of those crops. Plant traits that may be influenced by microbes include: yield (e.g., grain production, biomass generation, fruit development, flower set); nutrition (e.g., nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, iron, micronutrient acquisition); abiotic stress management (e.g., drought tolerance, salt tolerance, heat tolerance); and biotic stress management (e.g., pest, weeds, insects, fungi, and bacteria). Strategies for altering crop traits include: increasing key metabolite concentrations; changing temporal dynamics of microbe influence on key metabolites; linking microbial metabolite production/degradation to new environmental cues; reducing negative metabolites; and improving the balance of metabolites or underlying proteins.
[0066] As used herein, a control sequence refers to an operator, promoter, silencer, or terminator.
[0067] As used herein, in planta refers to in the plant, and wherein the plant further comprises leaves, roots, stems, seed, ovules, pollen, flowers, fruit, etc.
[0068] In some embodiments, native or endogenous control sequences of genes of the present disclosure are replaced with one or more intrageneric control sequences.
[0069] As used herein, introduced refers to the introduction by means of modern biotechnology, and not a naturally occurring introduction.
[0070] In some embodiments, the bacteria of the present disclosure have been modified such that they are not naturally occurring bacteria.
[0071] In some embodiments, the bacteria of the present disclosure are present in the plant in an amount of at least 10.sup.3 cfu, 10.sup.4 cfu, 10.sup.5 cfu, 10.sup.6 cfu, 10.sup.7 cfu, 10.sup.8 cfu, 10.sup.9 cfu, 10.sup.10 cfu, 10.sup.11 cfu, or 10.sup.12 cfu per gram of fresh or dry weight of the plant. In some embodiments, the bacteria of the present disclosure are present in the plant in an amount of at least about 10.sup.3 cfu, about 10.sup.4 cfu, about 10.sup.5 cfu, about 10.sup.6 cfu, about 10.sup.7 cfu, about 10.sup.8 cfu, about 10.sup.9 cfu, about 10.sup.10 cfu, about 10.sup.11 cfu, or about 10.sup.12 cfu per gram of fresh or dry weight of the plant. In some embodiments, the bacteria of the present disclosure are present in the plant in an amount of at least 10.sup.3 to 10.sup.9, 10.sup.3 to 10.sup.7, 10.sup.3 to 10.sup.5, 10.sup.5 to 10.sup.9, 10.sup.5 to 10.sup.7, 10.sup.6 to 10.sup.10, 10.sup.6 to 10.sup.7 cfu per gram of fresh or dry weight of the plant.
[0072] Fertilizers and exogenous nitrogen of the present disclosure may comprise the following nitrogen-containing molecules: ammonium, nitrate, nitrite, ammonia, glutamine, etc. Nitrogen sources of the present disclosure may include anhydrous ammonia, ammonia sulfate, urea, diammonium phosphate, urea-form, monoammonium phosphate, ammonium nitrate, nitrogen solutions, calcium nitrate, potassium nitrate, sodium nitrate, etc.
[0073] As used herein, exogenous nitrogen refers to non-atmospheric nitrogen readily available in the soil, field, or growth medium that is present under non-nitrogen limiting conditions, including ammonia, ammonium, nitrate, nitrite, urea, uric acid, ammonium acids, etc.
[0074] As used herein, non-nitrogen limiting conditions refers to non-atmospheric nitrogen available in the soil, field, media at concentrations greater than about 4 mM nitrogen, as disclosed by Kant et al. (2010. J. Exp. Biol. 62(4):1499-1509), which is incorporated herein by reference.
[0075] As used herein, an intergeneric microorganism is a microorganism that is formed by the deliberate combination of genetic material originally isolated from organisms of different taxonomic genera. An intergeneric mutant can be used interchangeably with intergeneric microorganism. An exemplary intergeneric microorganism includes a microorganism containing a mobile genetic element which was first identified in a microorganism in a genus different from the recipient microorganism. Further explanation can be found, inter alia, in 40 C.F.R. 725.3.
[0076] As used herein, an intrageneric microorganism is a microorganism that is formed by the deliberate combination of genetic material originally isolated from organisms of the same taxonomic genera. An intrageneric mutant can be used interchangeably with intrageneric microorganism.
[0077] As used herein, introduced genetic material means genetic material that is added to, and remains as a component of, the genome of the recipient.
[0078] In some embodiments, the nitrogen fixation and assimilation genetic regulatory network comprises polynucleotides encoding genes and non-coding sequences that direct, modulate, and/or regulate microbial nitrogen fixation and/or assimilation and can comprise polynucleotide sequences of the nif cluster (e.g., nifA, nifB, nifC, . . . nifZ), polynucleotides encoding nitrogen regulatory protein C, polynucleotides encoding nitrogen regulatory protein B, polynucleotide sequences of the gln cluster (e.g. glnA and glnD), draT, and ammonia transporters/permeases.
[0079] In some embodiments, fertilizer of the present disclosure comprises at least 5%, 6%, 7%, 8%, 9%, 10%, 11%, 12%, 13%, 14%, 15%, 16%, 17%, 18%, 19%, 20%, 21%, 22%, 23%, 24%, 25%, 26%, 27%, 28%, 29%, 30%, 31%, 32%, 33%, 34%, 35%, 36%, 37%, 38%, 39%, 40%, 41%, 42%, 43%, 44%, 45%, 46%, 47%, 48%, 49%, 50%, 51%, 52%, 53%, 54%, 55%, 56%, 57%, 58%, 59%, 60%, 61%, 62%, 63%, 64%, 65%, 66%, 67%, 68%, 69%, 70%, 71%, 72%, 73%, 74%, 75%, 76%, 77%, 78%, 79%, 80%, 81%, 82%, 83%, 84%, 85%, 86%, 87%, 88%, 89%, 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98%, 99% nitrogen by weight.
[0080] In some embodiments, fertilizer of the present disclosure comprises at least about 5%, about 6%, about 7%, about 8%, about 9%, about 10%, about 11%, about 12%, about 13%, about 14%, about 15%, about 16%, about 17%, about 18%, about 19%, about 20%, about 21%, about 22%, about 23%, about 24%, about 25%, about 26%, about 27%, about 28%, about 29%, about 30%, about 31%, about 32%, about 33%, about 34%, about 35%, about 36%, about 37%, about 38%, about 39%, about 40%, about 41%, about 42%, about 43%, about 44%, about 45%, about 46%, about 47%, about 48%, about 49%, about 50%, about 51%, about 52%, about 53%, about 54%, about 55%, about 56%, about 57%, about 58%, about 59%, about 60%, about 61%, about 62%, about 63%, about 64%, about 65%, about 66%, about 67%, about 68%, about 69%, about 70%, about 71%, about 72%, about 73%, about 74%, about 75%, about 76%, about 77%, about 78%, about 79%, about 80%, about 81%, about 82%, about 83%, about 84%, about 85%, about 86%, about 87%, about 88%, about 89%, about 90%, about 91%, about 92%, about 93%, about 94%, about 95%, about 96%, about 97%, about 98%, or about 99% nitrogen by weight.
[0081] In some embodiments, fertilizer of the present disclosure comprises about 5% to 50%, about 5% to 75%, about 10% to 50%, about 10% to 75%, about 15% to 50%, about 15% to 75%, about 20% to 50%, about 20% to 75%, about 25% to 50%, about 25% to 75%, about 30% to 50%, about 30% to 75%, about 35% to 50%, about 35% to 75%, about 40% to 50%, about 40% to 75%, about 45% to 50%, about 45% to 75%, or about 50% to 75% nitrogen by weight.
[0082] In some embodiments, the increase of nitrogen fixation and/or the production of 1% or more of the nitrogen in the plant are measured relative to control plants which have not been exposed to the bacteria of the present disclosure. All increases or decreases in bacteria are measured relative to control bacteria. All increases or decreases in plants are measured relative to control plants.
[0083] As used herein, a constitutive promoter is a promoter which is active under most conditions and/or during most development stages. There are several advantages to using constitutive promoters in expression vectors used in biotechnology, such as: high level of production of proteins used to select transgenic cells or organisms; high level of expression of reporter proteins or scoreable markers, allowing easy detection and quantification; high level of production of a transcription factor that is part of a regulatory transcription system; production of compounds that requires ubiquitous activity in the organism; and production of compounds that are required during all stages of development. Non-limiting exemplary constitutive promoters include, CaMV 35S promoter, opine promoters, ubiquitin promoter, alcohol dehydrogenase promoter, etc.
[0084] As used herein, a non-constitutive promoter is a promoter which is active under certain conditions, in certain types of cells, and/or during certain development stages. For example, tissue specific, tissue preferred, cell type specific, cell type preferred, inducible promoters, and promoters under development control are non-constitutive promoters. Examples of promoters under developmental control include promoters that preferentially initiate transcription in certain tissues.
[0085] As used herein, inducible or repressible promoter is a promoter which is under chemical or environmental factors control. Examples of environmental conditions that may affect transcription by inducible promoters include anaerobic conditions, certain chemicals, the presence of light, acidic or basic conditions, etc.
[0086] As used herein, a tissue specific promoter is a promoter that initiates transcription only in certain tissues. Unlike constitutive expression of genes, tissue-specific expression is the result of several interacting levels of gene regulation. As such, in the art sometimes it is preferable to use promoters from homologous or closely related species to achieve efficient and reliable expression of transgenes in particular tissues. This is one of the main reasons for the large amount of tissue-specific promoters isolated from particular tissues found in both scientific and patent literature.
[0087] As used herein, the term operably linked refers to the association of nucleic acid sequences on a single nucleic acid fragment so that the function of one is regulated by the other. For example, a promoter is operably linked with a coding sequence when it is capable of regulating the expression of that coding sequence (i.e., that the coding sequence is under the transcriptional control of the promoter). Coding sequences can be operably linked to regulatory sequences in a sense or antisense orientation. In another example, the complementary RNA regions of the disclosure can be operably linked, either directly or indirectly, 5 to the target mRNA, or 3 to the target mRNA, or within the target mRNA, or a first complementary region is 5 and its complement is 3 to the target mRNA
[0088] One trait that may be targeted for regulation by the methods described herein is nitrogen fixation. Nitrogen fertilizer is the largest operational expense on a farm and the biggest driver of higher yields in row crops like corn and wheat. Described herein are microbial products that can deliver renewable forms of nitrogen in non-leguminous crops. While some endophytes have the genetics necessary for fixing nitrogen in pure culture, the fundamental technical challenge is that wild-type endophytes of cereals and grasses stop fixing nitrogen in fertilized fields. The application of chemical fertilizers and residual nitrogen levels in field soils signal the microbe to shut down the biochemical pathway for nitrogen fixation.
[0089] Changes to the transcriptional and post-translational levels of nitrogen fixation regulatory network are required to develop a microbe capable of fixing and transferring nitrogen to corn in the presence of fertilizer. To that end, described herein is Host-Microbe Evolution (HoME) technology to precisely evolve regulatory networks and elicit novel phenotypes. Also described herein are unique, proprietary libraries of nitrogen-fixing endophytes isolated from corn, paired with extensive omics data surrounding the interaction of microbes and host plant under different environmental conditions like nitrogen stress and excess. This enables precision evolution of the genetic regulatory network of endophytes to produce microbes that actively fix nitrogen even in the presence of fertilizer in the field. Also described herein are evaluations of the technical potential of evolving microbes that colonize corn root tissues and produce nitrogen for fertilized plants and evaluations of the compatibility of endophytes with standard formulation practices and diverse soils to determine feasibility of integrating the microbes into modern nitrogen management strategies.
[0090] In order to utilize elemental nitrogen (N) for chemical synthesis, life forms combine nitrogen gas (N.sub.2) available in the atmosphere with hydrogen in a process known as nitrogen fixation. Because of the energy-intensive nature of biological nitrogen fixation, diazotrophs (bacteria and archaea that fix atmospheric nitrogen gas) have evolved sophisticated and tight regulation of the nif gene cluster in response to environmental oxygen and available nitrogen. Nif genes encode enzymes involved in nitrogen fixation (such as the nitrogenase complex) and proteins that regulate nitrogen fixation. Shamseldin (2013. Global J. Biotechnol. Biochem. 8(4):84-94) discloses detailed descriptions of nif genes and their products, and is incorporated herein by reference. Described herein are methods of producing a plant with an improved trait comprising isolating bacteria from a first plant, introducing a genetic variation into a nif gene of the isolated bacteria, exposing a second plant to the variant bacteria, isolating bacteria from the second plant having an improved trait relative to the first plant, and repeating the steps with bacteria isolated from the second plant.
[0091] In Proteobacteria, regulation of nitrogen fixation centers around the .sub.54-dependent enhancer-binding protein NifA, the positive transcriptional regulator of the nif cluster. Intracellular levels of active NifA are controlled by two key factors: transcription of the nifLA operon, and inhibition of NifA activity by protein-protein interaction with NifL. Both of these processes are responsive to intracelluar glutamine levels via the PII protein signaling cascade. This cascade is mediated by GlnD, which directly senses glutamine and catalyzes the uridylylation or deuridylylation of two PII regulatory proteinsGlnB and GlnKin response the absence or presence, respectively, of bound glutamine. Under conditions of nitrogen excess, unmodified GlnB signals the deactivation of the nifLA promoter. However, under conditions of nitrogen limitation, GlnB is post-translationally modified, which inhibits its activity and leads to transcription of the nifLA operon. In this way, nifLA transcription is tightly controlled in response to environmental nitrogen via the PII protein signaling cascade. On the post-translational level of NifA regulation, GlnK inhibits the NifL/NifA interaction in a matter dependent on the overall level of free GlnK within the cell.
[0092] NifA is transcribed from the nifLA operon, whose promoter is activated by phosphorylated NtrC, another .sub.54-dependent regulator. The phosphorylation state of NtrC is mediated by the histidine kinase NtrB, which interacts with deuridylylated GlnB, but not uridylylated GlnB. Under conditions of nitrogen excess, a high intracellular level of glutamine leads to deuridylylation of GlnB, which then interacts with NtrB to deactivate its phosphorylation activity and activate its phosphatase activity, resulting in dephosphorylation of NtrC and the deactivation of the nifLA promoter. However, under conditions of nitrogen limitation, a low level of intracellular glutamine results in uridylylation of GlnB, which inhibits its interaction with NtrB and allows the phosphorylation of NtrC and transcription of the nifLA operon. In this way, nifLA expression is tightly controlled in response to environmental nitrogen via the PII protein signaling cascade. nifA, ntrB, ntrC, and glnB, are all genes that can be mutated in the methods described herein.
[0093] The activity of NifA is also regulated post-translationally in response to environmental nitrogen, most typically through NifL-mediated inhibition of NifA activity. In general, the interaction of NifL and NifA is influenced by the PII protein signaling cascade via GlnK, although the nature of the interactions between GlnK and NifL/NifA varies significantly between diazotrophs. In Klebsiella pneumoniae, both forms of GlnK inhibit the NifL/NifA interaction, and the interaction between GlnK and NifL/NifA is determined by the overall level of free GlnK within the cell. Under nitrogen-excess conditions, deuridylylated GlnK interacts with the ammonium transporter AmtB, which serves to both block ammonium uptake by AmtB and sequester GlnK to the membrane, allowing inhibition of NifA by NifL. On the other hand, in Azotobacter vinelandii, interaction with deuridylylated GlnK is required for the NifL/NifA interaction and NifA inhibition, while uridylylation of GlnK inhibits its interaction with NifL. In diazotrophs lacking the nifL gene, there is evidence that NifA activity is inhibited directly by interaction with the deuridylylated forms of both GlnK and GlnB under nitrogen-excess conditions. Regardless of the mechanism, post-translational inhibition of NifA is an important regulator of the nif cluster in most known diazotrophs. Additionally, nifL, amtB, and glnK, are genes that can be mutated in the methods described herein.
[0094] In addition to regulating the transcription of the nif gene cluster, many diazotrophs have evolved a mechanism for the direct post-translational modification and inhibition of the nitrogenase enzyme itself, known as nitrogenase shutoff. This is mediated by ADP-ribosylation of the Fe protein (NifH) under nitrogen-excess conditions, which disrupts its interaction with the MoFe protein complex (NifDK) and abolishes nitrogenase activity. DraT catalyzes the ADP-ribosylation of the Fe protein and shutoff of nitrogenase, while DraG catalyzes the removal of ADP-ribose and reactivation of nitrogenase. As with nifLA transcription and NifA inhibition, nitrogenase shutoff is also regulated via the PII protein signaling cascade. Under nitrogen-excess conditions, deuridylylated GlnB interacts with and activates DraT, while deuridylylated GlnK interacts with both DraG and AmtB to form a complex, sequestering DraG to the membrane. Under nitrogen-limiting conditions, the uridylylated forms of GlnB and GlnK do not interact with DraT and DraG, respectively, leading to the inactivation of DraT and the diffusion of DraG to the Fe protein, where it removes the ADP-ribose and activates nitrogenase. The methods described herein also contemplate introducing genetic variation into the nifH, nifD, nifK, and draT genes.
[0095] Although some endophytes have the ability to fix nitrogen in vitro, often the genetics are silenced in the field by high levels of exogenous chemical fertilizers. One can decouple the sensing of exogenous nitrogen from expression of the nitrogenase enzyme to facilitate field-based nitrogen fixation. Improving the integral of nitrogenase activity across time further serves to augment the production of nitrogen for utilization by the crop. Specific targets for genetic variation to facilitate field-based nitrogen fixation using the methods described herein include one or more genes selected from the group consisting of nifA, nifL, ntrB, ntrC, glnA, glnB, glnK, draT, amtB, glnD, glnE, nifJ, nifH, nifD, nifK, nifY, nifE, nifty, nifU, nifS, nifV, nifW, nifZ, nifM, nifF, nifB, and nifQ.
[0096] An additional target for genetic variation to facilitate field-based nitrogen fixation using the methods described herein is the NifA protein. The NifA protein is typically the activator for expression of nitrogen fixation genes. Increasing the production of NifA (either constitutively or during high ammonia condition) circumvents the native ammonia-sensing pathway. In addition, reducing the production of NifL proteins, a known inhibitor of NifA, also leads to an increased level of freely active NifA. In addition, increasing the transcription level of the nifAL operon (either constitutively or during high ammonia condition) also leads to an overall higher level of NifA proteins. Elevated level of nifAL expression is achieved by altering the promoter itself or by reducing the expression of NtrB (part of ntrB and ntrC signaling cascade that originally would result in the shutoff of nifAL operon during high nitrogen condition). High level of NifA achieved by these or any other methods described herein increases the nitrogen fixation activity of the endophytes.
[0097] Another target for genetic variation to facilitate field-based nitrogen fixation using the methods described herein is the GlnD/GlnB/GlnK PII signaling cascade. The intracellular glutamine level is sensed through the GlnD/GlnB/GlnK PII signaling cascade. Active site mutations in GlnD that abolish the uridylyl-removing activity of GlnD disrupt the nitrogen-sensing cascade. In addition, reduction of the GlnB concentration short circuits the glutamine-sensing cascade. These mutations trick the cells into perceiving a nitrogen-limited state, thereby increasing the nitrogen fixation level activity.
[0098] The amtB protein is also a target for genetic variation to facilitate field-based nitrogen fixation using the methods described herein. Ammonia uptake from the environment can be reduced by decreasing the expression level of amtB protein. Without intracellular ammonia, the endophyte is not able to sense the high level of ammonia, preventing the down-regulation of nitrogen fixation genes. Any ammonia that manages to get into the intracellular compartment is converted into glutamine. Intracellular glutamine level is the major currency of nitrogen sensing. Decreasing the intracellular glutamine level prevents the cells from sensing high ammonium levels in the environment. This can be done by increasing the expression level of glutaminase, an enzyme that converts glutamine into glutamate. In addition, intracellular glutamine can also be reduced by decreasing glutamine synthase (an enzyme that converts ammonia into glutamine). In diazotrophs, fixed ammonia is quickly assimilated into glutamine and glutamate to be used for cellular processes. Disruptions to ammonia assimilation may enable diversion of fixed nitrogen to be exported from the cell as ammonia. The fixed ammonia is predominantly assimilated into glutamine by glutamine synthetase (GS), encoded by glnA, and subsequently into glutamine by glutamine oxoglutarate aminotransferase (GOGAT). In some examples, glnS encodes a glutamine synthetase. GS is regulated post-translationally by GS adenylyl transferase (GlnE), a bi-functional enzyme encoded by glnE that catalyzes both the adenylation and de-adenylation of GS through activity of its adenylyl-transferase (AT) and adenylyl-removing (AR) domains, respectively. Under nitrogen limiting conditions, glnA is expressed, and GlnE's AR domain de-adynylylates GS, allowing it to be active. Under conditions of nitrogen excess, glnA expression is turned off, and GlnE's AT domain is activated allosterically by glutamine, causing the adenylation and deactivation of GS.
[0099] Furthermore, the draT gene may also be a target for genetic variation to facilitate field-based nitrogen fixation using the methods described herein. Once nitrogen fixing enzymes are produced by the cell, nitrogenase shut-off represents another level in which cell downregulates fixation activity in high nitrogen condition. This shut-off could be removed by decreasing the expression level of DraT.
[0100] Methods for imparting new microbial phenotypes can be performed at the transcriptional, translational, and post-translational levels. The transcriptional level includes changes at the promoter (such as changing sigma factor affinity or binding sites for transcription factors, including deletion of all or a portion of the promoter) or changing transcription terminators and attenuators. The translational level includes changes at the ribosome binding sites and changing mRNA degradation signals. The post-translational level includes mutating an enzyme's active site and changing protein-protein interactions. These changes can be achieved in a multitude of ways. Reduction of expression level (or complete abolishment) can be achieved by swapping the native ribosome binding site (RBS) or promoter with another with lower strength/efficiency. ATG start sites can be swapped to a GTG, TTG, or CTG start codon, which results in reduction in translational activity of the coding region. Complete abolishment of expression can be done by knocking out (deleting) the coding region of a gene. Frameshifting the open reading frame (ORF) likely will result in a premature stop codon along the ORF, thereby creating a non-functional truncated product. Insertion of in-frame stop codons will also similarly create a non-functional truncated product. Addition of a degradation tag at the N or C terminal can also be done to reduce the effective concentration of a particular gene.
[0101] Conversely, expression level of the genes described herein can be achieved by using a stronger promoter. To ensure high promoter activity during high nitrogen level condition (or any other condition), a transcription profile of the whole genome in a high nitrogen level condition could be obtained, and active promoters with a desired transcription level can be chosen from that dataset to replace the weak promoter. Weak start codons can be swapped out with an ATG start codon for better translation initiation efficiency. Weak ribosomal binding sites (RBS) can also be swapped out with a different RBS with higher translation initiation efficiency. In addition, site specific mutagenesis can also be performed to alter the activity of an enzyme.
[0102] Increasing the level of nitrogen fixation that occurs in a plant can lead to a reduction in the amount of chemical fertilizer needed for crop production and reduce greenhouse gas emissions (e.g., nitrous oxide).
Serial Passage
[0103] Production of bacteria to improve plant traits (e.g., nitrogen fixation) can be achieved through serial passage. This can be done by selecting plants which have a particular improved trait which is influenced by the microbial flora, in addition to identifying bacteria and/or compositions that are capable of imparting one or more improved traits to one or more plants. One method of producing a bacteria to improve a plant trait includes the steps of: (a) isolating bacteria from tissue or soil of a first plant; (b) introducing a genetic variation into one or more of the bacteria to produce one or more variant bacteria; (c) exposing a plurality of plants to the variant bacteria; (d) isolating bacteria from tissue or soil of one of the plurality of plants, wherein the plant from which the bacteria is isolated has an improved trait relative to other plants in the plurality of plants; and (e) repeating steps (b) to (d) with bacteria isolated from the plant with an improved trait (step (d)). Steps (b) to (d) can be repeated any number of times (e.g., once, twice, three times, four times, five times, ten times, or more) until the improved trait in a plant reaches a desired level. Further, the plurality of plants can be more than two plants, such as 10 to 20 plants, or 20 or more, 50 or more, 100 or more, 300 or more, 500 or more, or 1000 or more plants.
[0104] In addition to obtaining a plant with an improved trait, a bacterial population comprising bacteria comprising one or more genetic variations introduced into one or more genes (e.g., genes regulating nitrogen fixation) is obtained. By repeating the steps described above, a population of bacteria can be obtained that include the most appropriate members of the population that correlate with a plant trait of interest. The bacteria in this population can be identified and their beneficial properties determined, such as by genetic and/or phenotypic analysis. Genetic analysis may occur of isolated bacteria in step (a). Phenotypic and/or genotypic information may be obtained using techniques including: high through-put screening of chemical components of plant origin, sequencing techniques including high throughput sequencing of genetic material, differential display techniques (including DDRT-PCR, and DD-PCR), nucleic acid microarray techniques, RNA-seq (Whole Transcriptome Shotgun Sequencing), and qRT-PCR (quantitative real time PCR). Information gained can be used to obtain community profiling information on the identity and activity of bacteria present, such as phylogenetic analysis or microarray-based screening of nucleic acids coding for components of rRNA operons or other taxonomically informative loci. Examples of taxonomically informative loci include 16S rRNA gene, 23S rRNA gene, 5S rRNA gene, 5.8S rRNA gene, 12S rRNA gene, 18S rRNA gene, 28S rRNA gene, gyrB gene, rpoB gene, fusA gene, recA gene, coxl gene, nifD gene. Example processes of taxonomic profiling to determine taxa present in a population are described in US20140155283. Bacterial identification may comprise characterizing activity of one or more genes or one or more signaling pathways, such as genes associated with the nitrogen fixation pathway. Synergistic interactions (where two components, by virtue of their combination, increase a desired effect by more than an additive amount) between different bacterial species may also be present in the bacterial populations.
[0105] The genetic variation may be a gene selected from the group consisting of: nifA, nifL, ntrB, ntrC, glnA, glnB, glnK, draT, amtB, glnD, glnE, nifJ, nifH, nifD, nifK, nifY, nifE, nifty, nifU, nifS, nifV, nifW, nifZ, nifM, nifF, nifB, and nifQ. The genetic variation may be a variation in a gene encoding a protein with functionality selected from the group consisting of: glutamine synthetase, glutaminase, glutamine synthetase adenylyltransferase, transcriptional activator, anti-transcriptional activator, pyruvate flavodoxin oxidoreductase, flavodoxin, or NAD+-dinitrogen-reductase aDP-D-ribosyltransferase. The genetic variation may be a mutation that results in one or more of: increased expression or activity of NifA or glutaminase; decreased expression or activity of NifL, NtrB, glutamine synthetase, GlnB, GlnK, DraT, AmtB; decreased adenylyl-removing activity of GlnE; or decreased uridylyl-removing activity of GlnD. Introducing a genetic variation may comprise insertion and/or deletion of one or more nucleotides at a target site, such as 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100, 250, 500, or more nucleotides. The genetic variation introduced into one or more bacteria of the methods disclosed herein may be a knock-out mutation (e.g. deletion of a promoter, insertion or deletion to produce a premature stop codon, deletion of an entire gene), or it may be elimination or abolishment of activity of a protein domain (e.g. point mutation affecting an active site, or deletion of a portion of a gene encoding the relevant portion of the protein product), or it may alter or abolish a regulatory sequence of a target gene. One or more regulatory sequences may also be inserted, including heterologous regulatory sequences and regulatory sequences found within a genome of a bacterial species or genus corresponding to the bacteria into which the genetic variation is introduced. Moreover, regulatory sequences may be selected based on the expression level of a gene in a bacterial culture or within a plant tissue. The genetic variation may be a pre-determined genetic variation that is specifically introduced to a target site. The genetic variation may be a random mutation within the target site. The genetic variation may be an insertion or deletion of one or more nucleotides. In some cases, a plurality of different genetic variations (e.g. 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, or more) are introduced into one or more of the isolated bacteria before exposing the bacteria to plants for assessing trait improvement. The plurality of genetic variations can be any of the above types, the same or different types, and in any combination. In some cases, a plurality of different genetic variations are introduced serially, introducing a first genetic variation after a first isolation step, a second genetic variation after a second isolation step, and so forth so as to accumulate a plurality of genetic variations in bacteria imparting progressively improved traits on the associated plants.
[0106] In general, the term genetic variation refers to any change introduced into a polynucleotide sequence relative to a reference polynucleotide, such as a reference genome or portion thereof, or reference gene or portion thereof. A genetic variation may be referred to as a mutation, and a sequence or organism comprising a genetic variation may be referred to as a genetic variant or mutant. Genetic variations can have any number of effects, such as the increase or decrease of some biological activity, including gene expression, metabolism, and cell signaling. Genetic variations can be specifically introduced to a target site, or introduced randomly. A variety of molecular tools and methods are available for introducing genetic variation. For example, genetic variation can be introduced via polymerase chain reaction mutagenesis, oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis, saturation mutagenesis, fragment shuffling mutagenesis, homologous recombination, CRISPR/Cas9 systems, chemical mutagenesis, and combinations thereof. Chemical methods of introducing genetic variation include exposure of DNA to a chemical mutagen, e.g., ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS), methyl methanesulfonate (MMS), N-nitrosourea (EN U), N-methyl-N-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine, 4-nitroquinoline N-oxide, diethyl sulfate, benzopyrene, cyclophosphamide, bleomycin, trimethylmelamine, acrylamide monomer, nitrogen mustard, vincristine, diepoxyalkanes (for example, diepoxybutane), ICR-170, formaldehyde, procarbazine hydrochloride, ethylene oxide, dimethylnitrosamine, 7,12 dimethylbenz(a)anthracene, chlorambucil, hexamethylphosphoramide, bisulfan, and the like. Radiation mutation-inducing agents include ultraviolet radiation, -irradiation, X-rays, and fast neutron bombardment. Genetic variation can also be introduced into a nucleic acid using, e.g., trimethylpsoralen with ultraviolet light. Random or targeted insertion of a mobile DNA element, e.g., a transposable element, is another suitable method for generating genetic variation. Genetic variations can be introduced into a nucleic acid during amplification in a cell-free in vitro system, e.g., using a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technique such as error-prone PCR. Genetic variations can be introduced into a nucleic acid in vitro using DNA shuffling techniques (e.g., exon shuffling, domain swapping, and the like). Genetic variations can also be introduced into a nucleic acid as a result of a deficiency in a DNA repair enzyme in a cell, e.g., the presence in a cell of a mutant gene encoding a mutant DNA repair enzyme is expected to generate a high frequency of mutations (i.e., about 1 mutation/100 genes-1 mutation/10,000 genes) in the genome of the cell. Examples of genes encoding DNA repair enzymes include but are not limited to Mut H, Mut S, Mut L, and Mut U, and the homologs thereof in other species (e.g., MSH 1 6, PMS 1 2, MLH 1, GTBP, ERCC-1, and the like). Example descriptions of various methods for introducing genetic variations are provided in e.g., Stemple (2004) Nature 5:1-7; Chiang et al. (1993) PCR Methods Appl 2(3): 210-217; Stemmer (1994) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91:10747-10751; and U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,033,861, and 6,773,900.
[0107] As a cyclic amplification technique, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) mutagenesis uses mutagenic primers to introduce desired mutations. PCR is performed by cycles of denaturation, annealing, and extension. After amplification by PCR, selection of mutated DNA and removal of parental plasmid DNA can be accomplished by: 1) replacement of dCTP by hydroxymethylated-dCTP during PCR, followed by digestion with restriction enzymes to remove non-hydroxymethylated parent DNA only; 2) simultaneous mutagenesis of both an antibiotic resistance gene and the studied gene changing the plasmid to a different antibiotic resistance, the new antibiotic resistance facilitating the selection of the desired mutation thereafter; 3) after introducing a desired mutation, digestion of the parent methylated template DNA by restriction enzyme Dpnl which cleaves only methylated DNA, by which the mutagenized unmethylated chains are recovered; or 4) circularization of the mutated PCR products in an additional ligation reaction to increase the transformation efficiency of mutated DNA. Further description of exemplary methods can be found in e.g. U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,132,265, 6,713,285, 6,673,610, 6,391,548, 5,789,166, 5,780,270, 5,354,670, 5,071,743, and US20100267147.
[0108] Oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis, also called site-directed mutagenesis, typically utilizes a synthetic DNA primer. This synthetic primer contains the desired mutation and is complementary to the template DNA around the mutation site so that it can hybridize with the DNA in the gene of interest. The mutation may be a single base change (a point mutation), multiple base changes, deletion, or insertion, or a combination of these. The single-strand primer is then extended using a DNA polymerase, which copies the rest of the gene. The gene thus copied contains the mutated site, and may then be introduced into a host cell as a vector and cloned. Finally, mutants can be selected by DNA sequencing to check that they contain the desired mutation.
[0109] Genetic variations can be introduced using error-prone PCR. In this technique the gene of interest is amplified using a DNA polymerase under conditions that are deficient in the fidelity of replication of sequence. The result is that the amplification products contain at least one error in the sequence. When a gene is amplified and the resulting product(s) of the reaction contain one or more alterations in sequence when compared to the template molecule, the resulting products are mutagenized as compared to the template. Another means of introducing random mutations is exposing cells to a chemical mutagen, such as nitrosoguanidine or ethyl methanesulfonate (Nestmann, Mutat Res 1975 June; 28(3):323-30), and the vector containing the gene is then isolated from the host.
[0110] Saturation mutagenesis is another form of random mutagenesis, in which one tries to generate all or nearly all possible mutations at a specific site, or narrow region of a gene. In a general sense, saturation mutagenesis is comprised of mutagenizing a complete set of mutagenic cassettes (wherein each cassette is, for example, 1-500 bases in length) in defined polynucleotide sequence to be mutagenized (wherein the sequence to be mutagenized is, for example, from 15 to 100,000 bases in length). Thusly, a group of mutations (e.g. ranging from 1 to 100 mutations) is introduced into each cassette to be mutagenized. A grouping of mutations to be introduced into one cassette can be different or the same from a second grouping of mutations to be introduced into a second cassette during the application of one round of saturation mutagenesis. Such groupings are exemplified by deletions, additions, groupings of particular codons, and groupings of particular nucleotide cassettes.
[0111] Fragment shuffling mutagenesis, also called DNA shuffling, is a way to rapidly propagate beneficial mutations. In an example of a shuffling process, DNAse is used to fragment a set of parent genes into pieces of e.g. about 50-100 bp in length. This is then followed by a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) without primersDNA fragments with sufficient overlapping homologous sequence will anneal to each other and are then be extended by DNA polymerase. Several rounds of this PCR extension are allowed to occur, after some of the DNA molecules reach the size of the parental genes. These genes can then be amplified with another PCR, this time with the addition of primers that are designed to complement the ends of the strands. The primers may have additional sequences added to their 5 ends, such as sequences for restriction enzyme recognition sites needed for ligation into a cloning vector. Further examples of shuffling techniques are provided in US20050266541.
[0112] Homologous recombination mutagenesis involves recombination between an exogenous DNA fragment and the targeted polynucleotide sequence. After a double-strand break occurs, sections of DNA around the 5 ends of the break are cut away in a process called resection. In the strand invasion step that follows, an overhanging 3 end of the broken DNA molecule then invades a similar or identical DNA molecule that is not broken. The method can be used to delete a gene, remove exons, add a gene, and introduce point mutations. Homologous recombination mutagenesis can be permanent or conditional. Typically, a recombination template is also provided. A recombination template may be a component of another vector, contained in a separate vector, or provided as a separate polynucleotide. In some embodiments, a recombination template is designed to serve as a template in homologous recombination, such as within or near a target sequence nicked or cleaved by a site-specific nuclease. A template polynucleotide may be of any suitable length, such as about or more than about 10, 15, 20, 25, 50, 75, 100, 150, 200, 500, 1000, or more nucleotides in length. In some embodiments, the template polynucleotide is complementary to a portion of a polynucleotide comprising the target sequence. When optimally aligned, a template polynucleotide might overlap with one or more nucleotides of a target sequences (e.g. about or more than about 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100 or more nucleotides). In some embodiments, when a template sequence and a polynucleotide comprising a target sequence are optimally aligned, the nearest nucleotide of the template polynucleotide is within about 1, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 50, 75, 100, 200, 300, 400, 500, 1000, 5000, 10000, or more nucleotides from the target sequence. Non-limiting examples of site-directed nucleases useful in methods of homologous recombination include zinc finger nucleases, CRISPR nucleases, TALE nucleases, and meganuclease. For a further description of the use of such nucleases, see e.g. U.S. Pat. No. 8,795,965 and US20140301990.
[0113] CRISPR/Cas9 (Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats)/CRISPR-associated (Cas) systems provide bacteria and archaea with adaptive immunity against viruses and plasmids by using CRISPR RNAs (crRNAs) to guide the silencing of invading nucleic acids. The Cas9 protein (or functional equivalent and/or variant thereof, i.e., Cas9-like protein) naturally contains DNA endonuclease activity that depends on association of the protein with two naturally occurring or synthetic RNA molecules called crRNA and tracrRNA (also called guide RNAs). In some cases, the two molecules are covalently linked to form a single molecule (also called a single guide RNA (sgRNA). Thus, the Cas9 or Cas9-like protein associates with a DNA-targeting RNA (which term encompasses both the two-molecule guide RNA configuration and the single-molecule guide RNA configuration), which activates the Cas9 or Cas9-like protein and guides the protein to a target nucleic acid sequence. If the Cas9 or Cas9-like protein retains its natural enzymatic function, it will cleave target DNA to create a double-strand break, which can lead to genome alteration (i.e., editing: deletion, insertion (when a donor polynucleotide is present), replacement, etc.), thereby altering gene expression. Some variants of Cas9 (which variants are encompassed by the term Cas9-like) have been altered such that they have a decreased DNA cleaving activity (in some cases, they cleave a single strand instead of both strands of the target DNA, while in other cases, they have severely reduced to no DNA cleavage activity). Further exemplary descriptions of CRISPR systems for introducing genetic variation can be found in, e.g. U.S. Pat. No. 8,795,965.
[0114] Mutagens that create primarily point mutations and short deletions, insertions, transversions, and/or transitions, including chemical mutagens or radiation, may be used to create genetic variations. Mutagens include, but are not limited to, ethyl methanesulfonate, methylmethane sulfonate, N-ethyl-N-nitrosurea, trimethylmelamine, N-methyl-N-nitrosourea, procarbazine, chlorambucil, cyclophosphamide, diethyl sulfate, acrylamide monomer, melphalan, nitrogen mustard, vincristine, dimethylnitrosamine, N-methyl-N-nitro-Nitrosoguanidine, nitrosoguanidine, 2-aminopurine, 7,12 dimethyl-benz(a)anthracene, ethylene oxide, hexamethylphosphoramide, bisulfan, diepoxyalkanes (diepoxyoctane, diepoxybutane, and the like), 2-methoxy-6-chloro-9[3-(ethyl-2-chloro-ethyl)aminopropylamino]acridine dihydrochloride and formaldehyde.
[0115] Introducing genetic variation may be an incomplete process, such that some bacteria in a treated population of bacteria carry a desired mutation while others do not. In some cases, it is desirable to apply a selection pressure so as to enrich for bacteria carrying a desired genetic variation. Traditionally, selection for successful genetic variants involved selection for or against some functionality imparted or abolished by the genetic variation, such as in the case of inserting antibiotic resistance gene or abolishing a metabolic activity capable of converting a non-lethal compound into a lethal metabolite. It is also possible to apply a selection pressure based on a polynucleotide sequence itself, such that only a desired genetic variation need be introduced (e.g. without also requiring a selectable marker). In this case, the selection pressure can comprise cleaving genomes lacking the genetic variation introduced to a target site, such that selection is effectively directed against the reference sequence into which the genetic variation is sought to be introduced. Typically, cleavage occurs within 100 nucleotides of the target site (e.g. within 75, 50, 25, 10, or fewer nucleotides from the target site, including cleavage at or within the target site). Cleaving may be directed by a site-specific nuclease selected from the group consisting of a Zinc Finger nuclease, a CRISPR nuclease, a TALE nuclease (TALEN), or a meganuclease. Such a process is similar to processes for enhancing homologous recombination at a target site, except that no template for homologous recombination is provided. As a result, bacteria lacking the desired genetic variation are more likely to undergo cleavage that, left unrepaired, results in cell death. Bacteria surviving selection may then be isolated for use in exposing to plants for assessing conferral of an improved trait.
[0116] A CRISPR nuclease may be used as the site-specific nuclease to direct cleavage to a target site. An improved selection of mutated microbes can be obtained by using Cas9 to kill non-mutated cells. Plants are then inoculated with the mutated microbes to re-confirm symbiosis and create evolutionary pressure to select for efficient symbionts. Microbes can then be re-isolated from plant tissues. CRISPR nuclease systems employed for selection against non-variants can employ similar elements to those described above with respect to introducing genetic variation, except that no template for homologous recombination is provided. Cleavage directed to the target site thus enhances death of affected cells.
[0117] Other options for specifically inducing cleavage at a target site are available, such as zinc finger nucleases, TALE nuclease (TALEN) systems, and meganuclease. Zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) are artificial DNA endonucleases generated by fusing a zinc finger DNA binding domain to a DNA cleavage domain. ZFNs can be engineered to target desired DNA sequences and this enables zinc-finger nucleases to cleave unique target sequences. When introduced into a cell, ZFNs can be used to edit target DNA in the cell (e.g., the cell's genome) by inducing double strand breaks. Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) are artificial DNA endonucleases generated by fusing a TAL (Transcription activator-like) effector DNA binding domain to a DNA cleavage domain. TALENS can be quickly engineered to bind practically any desired DNA sequence and when introduced into a cell, TALENs can be used to edit target DNA in the cell (e.g., the cell's genome) by inducing double strand breaks. Meganucleases (homing endonuclease) are endodeoxyribonucleases characterized by a large recognition site (double-stranded DNA sequences of 12 to 40 base pairs. Meganucleases can be used to replace, eliminate or modify sequences in a highly targeted way. By modifying their recognition sequence through protein engineering, the targeted sequence can be changed. Meganucleases can be used to modify all genome types, whether bacterial, plant or animal and are commonly grouped into four families: the LAGLIDADG family (SEQ ID NO: 1), the GIY-YIG family, the His-Cyst box family and the HNH family. Exemplary homing endonucleases include I-SceI, I-CeuI, PI-PspI, PI-Sce, I-SceIV, I-CsmI, I-PanI, I-SceII, I-PpoI, I-SceIII, I-CreI, I-TevI, I-TevII and I-TevIII.
[0118] Methods of the present disclosure may be employed to introduce or improve one or more of a variety of desirable traits. Examples of traits that may introduced or improved include: root biomass, root length, height, shoot length, leaf number, water use efficiency, overall biomass, yield, fruit size, grain size, photosynthesis rate, tolerance to drought, heat tolerance, salt tolerance, resistance to nematode stress, resistance to a fungal pathogen, resistance to a bacterial pathogen, resistance to a viral pathogen, level of a metabolite, and proteome expression. The desirable traits, including height, overall biomass, root and/or shoot biomass, seed germination, seedling survival, photosynthetic efficiency, transpiration rate, seed/fruit number or mass, plant grain or fruit yield, leaf chlorophyll content, photosynthetic rate, root length, or any combination thereof, can be used to measure growth, and compared with the growth rate of reference agricultural plants (e.g., plants without the improved traits) grown under identical conditions. A preferred trait to be introduced or improved is nitrogen fixation, as described herein. In some cases, a plant resulting from the methods described herein exhibits a difference in the trait that is at least about 5% greater, for example at least about 5%, at least about 8%, at least about 10%, at least about 15%, at least about 20%, at least about 25%, at least about 30%, at least about 40%, at least about 50%, at least about 60%, at least about 75%, at least about 80%, at least about 80%, at least about 90%, or at least 100%, at least about 200%, at least about 300%, at least about 400% or greater than a reference agricultural plant grown under the same conditions in the soil.
[0119] The trait to be improved may be assessed under conditions including the application of one or more biotic or abiotic stressors. Examples of stressors include abiotic stresses (such as heat stress, salt stress, drought stress, cold stress, and low nutrient stress) and biotic stresses (such as nematode stress, insect herbivory stress, fungal pathogen stress, bacterial pathogen stress, and viral pathogen stress).
[0120] The trait improved by methods and compositions of the present disclosure may be nitrogen fixation, including in a plant not previously capable of nitrogen fixation. In some cases, bacteria isolated according to a method described herein produce 1% or more (e.g. 2%, 3%, 4%, 5%, 6%, 7%, 8%, 9%, 10%, 15%, 20%, or more) of a plant's nitrogen, which may represent an increase in nitrogen fixation capability of at least 2-fold (e.g. 3-fold, 4-fold, 5-fold, 6-fold, 7-fold, 8-fold, 9-fold, 10-fold, 20-fold, 50-fold, 100-fold, 1000-fold, or more) as compared to bacteria isolated from the first plant before introducing any genetic variation. In some cases, the bacteria produce 5% or more of a plant's nitrogen. The desired level of nitrogen fixation may be achieved after repeating the steps of introducing genetic variation, exposure to a plurality of plants, and isolating bacteria from plants with an improved trait one or more times (e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 15, 25, or more times). In some cases, enhanced levels of nitrogen fixation are achieved in the presence of fertilizer supplemented with glucamine, ammonia, or other chemical source of nitrogen. Methods for assessing degree of nitrogen fixation are known, examples of which are described herein.
Nitrogen Fixation
[0121] Described herein are methods of increasing nitrogen fixation in a plant, comprising exposing the plant to bacteria comprising one or more genetic variations introduced into one or more genes regulating nitrogen fixation, wherein the bacteria produce 1% or more of nitrogen in the plant (e.g. 2%, 5%, 10%, or more), which may represent a nitrogen-fixation capability of at least 2-fold as compared to the plant in the absence of the bacteria. The bacteria may produce the nitrogen in the presence of fertilizer supplemented with glutamine or ammonia. Genetic variations can be any genetic variation described herein, including examples provided above, in any number and any combination. The genetic variation may be introduced into a gene selected from the group consisting of nifA, nifL, ntrB, ntrC, glutamine synthetase, glnA, glnB, glnK, draT, amtB, glutaminase, glnD, glnE, nifJ, nifH, nifD, nifK, nifY, nifE, nifN, nifU, nifS, nifV, nifW, nifZ, nifM, nifF, nifB, and nifQ. The genetic variation may be a mutation that results in one or more of: increased expression or activity of nifA or glutaminase; decreased expression or activity of nifL, ntrB, glutamine synthetase, glnB, glnK, draT, amtB; decreased adenylyl-removing activity of GlnE; or decreased uridylyl-removing activity of GlnD. The genetic variation introduced into one or more bacteria of the methods disclosed herein may be a knock-out mutation or it may abolish a regulatory sequence of a target gene, or it may comprise insertion of a heterologous regulatory sequence, for example, insertion of a regulatory sequence found within the genome of the same bacterial species or genus. The regulatory sequence can be chosen based on the expression level of a gene in a bacterial culture or within plant tissue. The genetic variation may be produced by chemical mutagenesis. The plants grown in step (c) may be exposed to biotic or abiotic stressors.
[0122] The amount of nitrogen fixation that occurs in the plants described herein may be measured in several ways, for example by an acetylene-reduction (AR) assay. An acetylene-reduction assay can be performed in vitro or in vivo. Evidence that a particular bacterium is providing fixed nitrogen to a plant can include: 1) total plant N significantly increases upon inoculation, preferably with a concomitant increase in N concentration in the plant; 2) nitrogen deficiency symptoms are relieved under N-limiting conditions upon inoculation (which should include an increase in dry matter); 3) N.sub.2 fixation is documented through the use of an .sup.15N approach (which can be isotope dilution experiments, .sup.15N.sub.2 reduction assays, or .sup.15N natural abundance assays); 4) fixed N is incorporated into a plant protein or metabolite; and 5) all of these effects are not be seen in uninoculated plants or in plants inoculated with a mutant of the inoculum strain.
[0123] The wild-type nitrogen fixation regulatory cascade can be represented as a digital logic circuit where the inputs O.sub.2 and NH.sub.4.sup.+ pass through a NOR gate, the output of which enters an AND gate in addition to ATP. In some embodiments, the methods disclosed herein disrupt the influence of NH.sub.4.sup.+ on this circuit, at multiple points in the regulatory cascade, so that microbes can produce nitrogen even in fertilized fields. However, the methods disclosed herein also envision altering the impact of ATP or O.sub.2 on the circuitry, or replacing the circuitry with other regulatory cascades in the cell, or altering genetic circuits other than nitrogen fixation. Gene clusters can be re-engineered to generate functional products under the control of a heterologous regulatory system. By eliminating native regulatory elements outside of, and within, coding sequences of gene clusters, and replacing them with alternative regulatory systems, the functional products of complex genetic operons and other gene clusters can be controlled and/or moved to heterologous cells, including cells of different species other than the species from which the native genes were derived. Once re-engineered, the synthetic gene clusters can be controlled by genetic circuits or other inducible regulatory systems, thereby controlling the products' expression as desired. The expression cassettes can be designed to act as logic gates, pulse generators, oscillators, switches, or memory devices. The controlling expression cassette can be linked to a promoter such that the expression cassette functions as an environmental sensor, such as an oxygen, temperature, touch, osmotic stress, membrane stress, or redox sensor.
[0124] As an example, the nifL, nifA, nifT, and nifX genes can be eliminated from the nif gene cluster. Synthetic genes can be designed by codon randomizing the DNA encoding each amino acid sequence. Codon selection is performed, specifying that codon usage be as divergent as possible from the codon usage in the native gene. Proposed sequences are scanned for any undesired features, such as restriction enzyme recognition sites, transposon recognition sites, repetitive sequences, sigma 54 and sigma 70 promoters, cryptic ribosome binding sites, and rho independent terminators. Synthetic ribosome binding sites are chosen to match the strength of each corresponding native ribosome binding site, such as by constructing a fluorescent reporter plasmid in which the 150 bp surrounding a gene's start codon (from 60 to +90) is fused to a fluorescent gene. This chimera can be expressed under control of the Ptac promoter, and fluorescence measured via flow cytometry. To generate synthetic ribosome binding sites, a library of reporter plasmids using 150 bp (60 to +90) of a synthetic expression cassette is generated. Briefly, a synthetic expression cassette can consist of a random DNA spacer, a degenerate sequence encoding an RBS library, and the coding sequence for each synthetic gene. Multiple clones are screened to identify the synthetic ribosome binding site that best matched the native ribosome binding site. Synthetic operons that consist of the same genes as the native operons are thus constructed and tested for functional complementation. A further exemplary description of synthetic operons is provided in US20140329326.
Bacterial Species
[0125] Microbes useful in the methods and compositions disclosed herein can be obtained by extracting microbes from surfaces or tissues of native plants; grinding seeds to isolate microbes; planting seeds in diverse soil samples and recovering microbes from tissues; or inoculating plants with exogenous microbes and determining which microbes appear in plant tissues. Non-limiting examples of plant tissues include a seed, seedling, leaf, cutting, plant, bulb or tuber. In some cases, bacteria are isolated from a seed. The parameters for processing samples may be varied to isolate different types of associative microbes, such as rhizospheric, epiphytes, or endophytes. Bacteria may also be sourced from a repository, such as environmental strain collections, instead of initially isolating from a first plant. The microbes can be genotyped and phenotyped, via sequencing the genomes of isolated microbes; profiling the composition of communities in planta; characterizing the transcriptomic functionality of communities or isolated microbes; or screening microbial features using selective or phenotypic media (e.g., nitrogen fixation or phosphate solubilization phenotypes). Selected candidate strains or populations can be obtained via sequence data; phenotype data; plant data (e.g., genome, phenotype, and/or yield data); soil data (e.g., pH, N/P/K content, and/or bulk soil biotic communities); or any combination of these.
[0126] The bacteria and methods of producing bacteria described herein may apply to bacteria able to self-propagate efficiently on the leaf surface, root surface, or inside plant tissues without inducing a damaging plant defense reaction, or bacteria that are resistant to plant defense responses. The bacteria described herein may be isolated by culturing a plant tissue extract or leaf surface wash in a medium with no added nitrogen. However, the bacteria may be unculturable, that is, not known to be culturable or difficult to culture using standard methods known in the art. The bacteria described herein may be an endophyte or an epiphyte or a bacterium inhabiting the plant rhizosphere (rhizospheric bacteria). The bacteria obtained after repeating the steps of introducing genetic variation, exposure to a plurality of plants, and isolating bacteria from plants with an improved trait one or more times (e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 15, 25, or more times) may be endophytic, epiphytic, or rhizospheric. Endophytes are organisms that enter the interior of plants without causing disease symptoms or eliciting the formation of symbiotic structures, and are of agronomic interest because they can enhance plant growth and improve the nutrition of plants (e.g., through nitrogen fixation). The bacteria can be a seed-borne endophyte. Seed-borne endophytes include bacteria associated with or derived from the seed of a grass or plant, such as a seed-borne bacterial endophyte found in mature, dry, undamaged (e.g., no cracks, visible fungal infection, or prematurely germinated) seeds. The seed-borne bacterial endophyte can be associated with or derived from the surface of the seed; alternatively, or in addition, it can be associated with or derived from the interior seed compartment (e.g., of a surface-sterilized seed). In some cases, a seed-borne bacterial endophyte is capable of replicating within the plant tissue, for example, the interior of the seed. Also, in some cases, the seed-borne bacterial endophyte is capable of surviving desiccation.
[0127] The bacterial isolated according to methods of the disclosure can comprise a plurality of different bacterial taxa in combination. By way of example, the bacteria may include Proteobacteria (such as Pseudomonas, Enterobacter, Stenotrophomonas, Burkholderia, Rhizobium, Herbaspirillum, Pantoea, Serratia, Rahnella, Azospirillum, Azorhizobium, Azotobacter, Duganella, Delftia, Bradyrhizobiun, Sinorhizobium and Halomonas), Firmicutes (such as Bacillus, Paenibacillus, Lactobacillus, Mycoplasma, and Acetabacterium), and Actinobacteria (such as Streptomyces, Rhodacoccus, Microbacterium, and Curtobacterium). Bacteria that can be produced by the methods disclosed herein include Azotobacter sp., Bradyrhizobium sp., Klebsiella sp., and Sinorhizobium sp. The bacteria may be selected from the group consisting of: Azotobacter vinelandii, Bradyrhizobium japonicum, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Sinorhizobium meliloti. The bacteria may be of the genus Enterobacter and Rahnella.
[0128] The bacteria may be obtained from any general terrestrial environment, including its soils, plants, fungi, animals (including invertebrates) and other biota, including the sediments, water and biota of lakes and rivers; from the marine environment, its biota and sediments (for example, sea water, marine muds, marine plants, marine invertebrates (for example, sponges), marine vertebrates (for example, fish)); the terrestrial and marine geosphere (regolith and rock, for example, crushed subterranean rocks, sand and clays); the cryosphere and its meltwater; the atmosphere (for example, filtered aerial dusts, cloud and rain droplets); urban, industrial and other man-made environments (for example, accumulated organic and mineral matter on concrete, roadside gutters, roof surfaces, and road surfaces).
[0129] The plants from which the bacteria are obtained may be a plant having one or more desirable traits, for example a plant which naturally grows in a particular environment or under certain conditions of interest. By way of example, a certain plant may naturally grow in sandy soil or sand of high salinity, or under extreme temperatures, or with little water, or it may be resistant to certain pests or disease present in the environment, and it may be desirable for a commercial crop to be grown in such conditions, particularly if they are, for example, the only conditions available in a particular geographic location. By way of further example, the bacteria may be collected from commercial crops grown in such environments, or more specifically from individual crop plants best displaying a trait of interest amongst a crop grown in any specific environment: for example the fastest-growing plants amongst a crop grown in saline-limiting soils, or the least damaged plants in crops exposed to severe insect damage or disease epidemic, or plants having desired quantities of certain metabolites and other compounds, including fibre content, oil content, and the like, or plants displaying desirable colors, taste or smell. The bacteria may be collected from a plant of interest or any material occurring in the environment of interest, including fungi and other animal and plant biota, soil, water, sediments, and other elements of the environment as referred to previously.
[0130] The bacteria may be isolated from plant tissue. This isolation can occur from any appropriate tissue in the plant, including for example root, stem and leaves, and plant reproductive tissues. By way of example, conventional methods for isolation from plants typically include the sterile excision of the plant material of interest (e.g. root or stem lengths, leaves), surface sterilization with an appropriate solution (e.g. 2% sodium hypochlorite), after which the plant material is placed on nutrient medium for microbial growth. Alternatively, the surface-sterilized plant material can be crushed in a sterile liquid (usually water) and the liquid suspension, including small pieces of the crushed plant material spread over the surface of a suitable solid agar medium, or media, which may or may not be selective (e.g. contain only phytic acid as a source of phosphorus). This approach is especially useful for bacteria which form isolated colonies and can be picked off individually to separate plates of nutrient medium, and further purified to a single species by well-known methods. Alternatively, the plant root or foliage samples may not be surface sterilized but only washed gently thus including surface-dwelling epiphytic microorganisms in the isolation process, or the epiphytic microbes can be isolated separately, by imprinting and lifting off pieces of plant roots, stem or leaves onto the surface of an agar medium and then isolating individual colonies as above. This approach is especially useful for bacteria, for example. Alternatively, the roots may be processed without washing off small quantities of soil attached to the roots, thus including microbes that colonize the plant rhizosphere. Otherwise, soil adhering to the roots can be removed, diluted and spread out onto agar of suitable selective and non-selective media to isolate individual colonies of rhizospheric bacteria.
[0131] Biologically pure cultures of Rahnella aquatilis and Enterobacter sacchari were deposited on Jul. 14, 2015 with the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC; an International Depositary Authority), Manassas, VA, USA, and assigned ATTC Patent Deposit Designation numbers PTA-122293 and PTA-122294, respectively. These deposits were made under the provisions of the Budapest Treaty on the International Recognition of the Deposit of Microorganisms for the Purpose of Patent Procedure and the Regulations (Budapest Treaty).
Compositions
[0132] Compositions comprising bacteria or bacterial populations produced according to methods described herein and/or having characteristics as described herein may also be used to improve plant traits. The compositions comprising bacterial populations may be coated on a surface of a seed, and may be in liquid form. The compositions include seed coatings for commercially important agricultural crops, for example, sorghum, canola, tomato, strawberry, barley, rice, maize, and wheat. The compositions may also be sprayed on the plant aerial parts, or applied to the roots by inserting into furrows in which the plant seeds are planted, watering to the soil, or dipping the roots in a suspension of the composition. The compositions may be dehydrated in a suitable manner that maintains cell viability and the ability to artificially inoculate and colonize host plants. The bacterial species may be present in the compositions at a concentration of between 10.sup.8 to 10.sup.10 CFU/ml. The compositions may be supplemented with trace metal ions, such as molybdenum ions, iron ions, manganese ions, or combinations of these ions. The concentration of ions in the compositions described herein may between about 0.1 mM and about 50 mM. The compositions may also be formulated with a carrier, such as beta-glucan, carboxylmethyl cellulose (CMC), bacterial extracellular polymeric substance (EPS), sugar, animal milk, or other suitable carriers. Alternatively, peat or planting materials can be used as a carrier, or biopolymers in which the composition is entrapped in the biopolymer can be used as a carrier. The compositions comprising the bacterial populations described herein can improve plant traits, such as promoting plant growth, maintaining high chlorophyll content in leaves, increasing fruit or seed numbers, and increasing fruit or seed unit weight.
[0133] The compositions comprising the bacterial populations described herein may be coated onto the surface of a seed. As such, compositions comprising a seed coated with one or more bacteria described herein are also contemplated. The seed coating can be formed by mixing the bacterial population with a porous, chemically inert granular carrier. Alternatively, the compositions may be inserted directly into the furrows into which the seed is planted or sprayed onto the plant leaves or applied by dipping the roots into a suspension of the composition. An effective amount of the composition can be used to populate the sub-soil region adjacent to the roots of the plant with viable bacterial growth, or populate the leaves of the plant with viable bacterial growth. In general, an effective amount is an amount sufficient to result in plants with improved traits (e.g. a desired level of nitrogen fixation).
[0134] Bacterial compositions described herein can be formulated using an agriculturally acceptable carrier. The formulation useful for these embodiments may include at least one member selected from the group consisting of a tackifier, a microbial stabilizer, a fungicide, an antibacterial agent, an herbicide, a nematicide, an insecticide, a plant growth regulator, a fertilizer, a rodenticide, a desiccant, and a nutrient. For example, any of the compositions described herein can include an agriculturally acceptable carrier (e.g., one or more of a fertilizer such as a non-naturally occurring fertilizer, an adhesion agent such as a non-naturally occurring adhesion agent, and a pesticide such as a non-naturally occurring pesticide). A non-naturally occurring adhesion agent can be, for example, a polymer, copolymer, or synthetic wax. For example, any of the coated seeds, seedlings, or plants described herein can contain such an agriculturally acceptable carrier in the seed coating. In any of the compositions or methods described herein, an agriculturally acceptable carrier can be or can include a non-naturally occurring compound (e.g., a non-naturally occurring fertilizer, a non-naturally occurring adhesion agent such as a polymer, copolymer, or synthetic wax, or a non-naturally occurring pesticide). Non-limiting examples of agriculturally acceptable carriers are described below. Additional examples of agriculturally acceptable carriers are known in the art.
[0135] In some cases, bacteria are mixed with an agriculturally acceptable carrier. The carrier can be a solid carrier or liquid carrier, and in various forms including microspheres, powders, emulsions and the like. The carrier may be any one or more of a number of carriers that confer a variety of properties, such as increased stability, wettability, or dispersability. Wetting agents such as natural or synthetic surfactants, which can be nonionic or ionic surfactants, or a combination thereof can be included in the composition. Water-in-oil emulsions can also be used to formulate a composition that includes the isolated bacteria (see, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 7,485,451). Suitable formulations that may be prepared include wettable powders, granules, gels, agar strips or pellets, thickeners, and the like, microencapsulated particles, and the like, liquids such as aqueous flowables, aqueous suspensions, water-in-oil emulsions, etc. The formulation may include grain or legume products, for example, ground grain or beans, broth or flour derived from grain or beans, starch, sugar, or oil.
[0136] In some embodiments, the agricultural carrier may be soil or a plant growth medium. Other agricultural carriers that may be used include water, fertilizers, plant-based oils, humectants, or combinations thereof. Alternatively, the agricultural carrier may be a solid, such as diatomaceous earth, loam, silica, alginate, clay, bentonite, vermiculite, seed cases, other plant and animal products, or combinations, including granules, pellets, or suspensions. Mixtures of any of the aforementioned ingredients are also contemplated as carriers, such as but not limited to, pesta (flour and kaolin clay), agar or flour-based pellets in loam, sand, or clay, etc. Formulations may include food sources for the bacteria, such as barley, rice, or other biological materials such as seed, plant parts, sugar cane bagasse, hulls or stalks from grain processing, ground plant material or wood from building site refuse, sawdust or small fibers from recycling of paper, fabric, or wood.
[0137] For example, a fertilizer can be used to help promote the growth or provide nutrients to a seed, seedling, or plant. Non-limiting examples of fertilizers include nitrogen, phosphorous, potassium, calcium, sulfur, magnesium, boron, chloride, manganese, iron, zinc, copper, molybdenum, and selenium (or a salt thereof). Additional examples of fertilizers include one or more amino acids, salts, carbohydrates, vitamins, glucose, NaCl, yeast extract, NH.sub.4H.sub.2PO.sub.4, (NH.sub.4).sub.2SO.sub.4, glycerol, valine, L-leucine, lactic acid, propionic acid, succinic acid, malic acid, citric acid, KH tartrate, xylose, lyxose, and lecithin. In one embodiment, the formulation can include a tackifier or adherent (referred to as an adhesive agent) to help bind other active agents to a substance (e.g., a surface of a seed). Such agents are useful for combining bacteria with carriers that can contain other compounds (e.g., control agents that are not biologic), to yield a coating composition. Such compositions help create coatings around the plant or seed to maintain contact between the microbe and other agents with the plant or plant part. In one embodiment, adhesives are selected from the group consisting of: alginate, gums, starches, lecithins, formononetin, polyvinyl alcohol, alkali formononetinate, hesperetin, polyvinyl acetate, cephalins, Gum Arabic, Xanthan Gum, Mineral Oil, Polyethylene Glycol (PEG), Polyvinyl pyrrolidone (PVP), Arabino-galactan, Methyl Cellulose, PEG 400, Chitosan, Polyacrylamide, Polyacrylate, Polyacrylonitrile, Glycerol, Triethylene glycol, Vinyl Acetate, Gellan Gum, Polystyrene, Polyvinyl, Carboxymethyl cellulose, Gum Ghatti, and polyoxyethylene-polyoxybutylene block copolymers.
[0138] In some embodiments, the adhesives can be, e.g. a wax such as carnauba wax, beeswax, Chinese wax, shellac wax, spermaceti wax, candelilla wax, castor wax, ouricury wax, and rice bran wax, a polysaccharide (e.g., starch, dextrins, maltodextrins, alginate, and chitosans), a fat, oil, a protein (e.g., gelatin and zeins), gum arables, and shellacs. Adhesive agents can be non-naturally occurring compounds, e.g., polymers, copolymers, and waxes. For example, non-limiting examples of polymers that can be used as an adhesive agent include: polyvinyl acetates, polyvinyl acetate copolymers, ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) copolymers, polyvinyl alcohols, polyvinyl alcohol copolymers, celluloses (e.g., ethylcelluloses, methylcelluloses, hydroxymethylcelluloses, hydroxypropylcelluloses, and carboxymethylcelluloses), polyvinylpyrolidones, vinyl chloride, vinylidene chloride copolymers, calcium lignosulfonates, acrylic copolymers, polyvinylacrylates, polyethylene oxide, acylamide polymers and copolymers, polyhydroxyethyl acrylate, methylacrylamide monomers, and polychloroprene.
[0139] In some examples, one or more of the adhesion agents, anti-fungal agents, growth regulation agents, and pesticides (e.g., insecticide) are non-naturally occurring compounds (e.g., in any combination). Additional examples of agriculturally acceptable carriers include dispersants (e.g., polyvinylpyrrolidone/vinyl acetate PVPIVA S-630), surfactants, binders, and filler agents.
[0140] The formulation can also contain a surfactant. Non-limiting examples of surfactants include nitrogen-surfactant blends such as Prefer 28 (Cenex), Surf-N (US), Inhance (Brandt), P-28 (Wilfarm) and Patrol (Helena); esterified seed oils include Sun-It II (AmCy), MSO (UAP), Scoil (Agsco), Hasten (Wilfarm) and Mes-100 (Drexel); and organo-silicone surfactants include Silwet L77 (UAP), Silikin (Terra), Dyne-Amic (Helena), Kinetic (Helena), Sylgard 309 (Wilbur-Ellis) and Century (Precision). In one embodiment, the surfactant is present at a concentration of between v/v to 10% v/v. In another embodiment, the surfactant is present at a concentration of between 0.1% v/v to 1% v/v.
[0141] In certain cases, the formulation includes a microbial stabilizer. Such an agent can include a desiccant, which can include any compound or mixture of compounds that can be classified as a desiccant regardless of whether the compound or compounds are used in such concentrations that they in fact have a desiccating effect on a liquid inoculant. Such desiccants are ideally compatible with the bacterial population used, and should promote the ability of the microbial population to survive application on the seeds and to survive desiccation. Examples of suitable desiccants include one or more of trehalose, sucrose, glycerol, and Methylene glycol. Other suitable desiccants include, but are not limited to, non reducing sugars and sugar alcohols (e.g., mannitol or sorbitol). The amount of desiccant introduced into the formulation can range from about 5% to about 50% by weight/volume, for example, between about 10% to about 40%, between about 15% to about 35%, or between about 20% to about 30%. In some cases, it is advantageous for the formulation to contain agents such as a fungicide, an antibacterial agent, an herbicide, a nematicide, an insecticide, a plant growth regulator, a rodenticide, or a nutrient. Non-limiting examples of growth regulators include brassinosteroids, cytokinines (e.g., kinetin and zeatin), auxins (e.g., indolylacetic acid and indolylacetyl aspartate), flavonoids and isoflavanoids (e.g., formononetin and diosmetin), phytoaixins (e.g., glyceolline), and phytoalexin-inducing oligosaccharides (e.g., pectin, chitin, chitosan, polygalacuronic acid, and oligogalacturonic acid), and gibellerins. Such agents are ideally compatible with the agricultural seed or seedling onto which the formulation is applied (e.g., it should not be deleterious to the growth or health of the plant). Furthermore, the agent is ideally one which does not cause safety concerns for human, animal or industrial use (e.g., no safety issues, or the compound is sufficiently labile that the commodity plant product derived from the plant contains negligible amounts of the compound).
[0142] In the liquid form, for example, solutions or suspensions, bacterial populations can be mixed or suspended in water or in aqueous solutions. Suitable liquid diluents or carriers include water, aqueous solutions, petroleum distillates, or other liquid carriers.
[0143] Solid compositions can be prepared by dispersing the bacterial populations in and on an appropriately divided solid carrier, such as peat, wheat, bran, vermiculite, clay, talc, bentonite, diatomaceous earth, fuller's earth, pasteurized soil, and the like. When such formulations are used as wettable powders, biologically compatible dispersing agents such as non-ionic, anionic, amphoteric, or cationic dispersing and emulsifying agents can be used.
[0144] The solid carriers used upon formulation include, for example, mineral carriers such as kaolin clay, pyrophyllite, bentonite, montmorillonite, diatomaceous earth, acid white soil, vermiculite, and pearlite, and inorganic salts such as ammonium sulfate, ammonium phosphate, ammonium nitrate, urea, ammonium chloride, and calcium carbonate. Also, organic fine powders such as wheat flour, wheat bran, and rice bran may be used. The liquid carriers include vegetable oils such as soybean oil and cottonseed oil, glycerol, ethylene glycol, polyethylene glycol, propylene glycol, polypropylene glycol, etc.
Plant Species
[0145] The methods and bacteria described herein are suitable for any of a variety of plants, such as plants in the genera Hordeum, Oryza, Zea, and Triticeae. Other non-limiting examples of suitable plants include mosses, lichens, and algae. In some cases, the plants have economic, social and/or environmental value, such as food crops, fiber crops, oil crops, plants in the forestry or pulp and paper industries, feedstock for biofuel production and/or ornamental plants. Non-limiting examples of crop plants include maize, rice, wheat, barley, sorghum, millet, oats, rye triticale, buckwheat, sweet corn, sugar cane, onions, tomatoes, strawberries, and asparagus.
[0146] Plants that may be obtained or improved using the methods and composition disclosed herein also include pineapple, banana, coconut, lily, and grass; and dicotyledonous plants, such as, for example, peas, alfalfa, tomatillo, melon, chickpea, chicory, clover, kale, lentil, soybean, tobacco, potato, sweet potato, radish, cabbage, rape, apple trees, grape, cotton, sunflower, thale cress, canola, citrus (including orange, mandarin, kumquat, lemon, lime, grapefruit, tangerine, tangelo, citron, and pomelo), pepper, bean, and lettuce.
[0147] In some cases, the plant to be improved is not readily amenable to experimental conditions. For example, a crop plant may take too long to grow enough to practically assess an improved trait serially over multiple iterations. Accordingly, a first plant from which bacteria are initially isolated, and/or the plurality of plants to which genetically manipulated bacteria are applied may be a model plant, such as a plant more amenable to evaluation under desired conditions. Non-limiting examples of model plants include Setaria, Brachypodium, and Arabidopsis. Ability of bacteria isolated according to a method of the disclosure using a model plant may then be applied to a plant of another type (e.g. a crop plant) to confirm conferral of the improved trait.
[0148] Traits that may be improved by the methods disclosed herein include any observable characteristic of the plant, including, for example, growth rate, height, weight, color, taste, smell, changes in the production of one or more compounds by the plant (including for example, metabolites, proteins, drugs, carbohydrates, oils, and any other compounds). Selecting plants based on genotypic information is also envisaged (for example, including the pattern of plant gene expression in response to the bacteria, or identifying the presence of genetic markers, such as those associated with increased nitrogen fixation). Plants may also be selected based on the absence, suppression or inhibition of a certain feature or trait (such as an undesirable feature or trait) as opposed to the presence of a certain feature or trait (such as a desirable feature or trait).
EXAMPLES
[0149] The examples provided herein describe methods of bacterial isolation, bacterial and plant analysis, and plant trait improvement. The examples are for illustrative purposes only and are not to be construed as limiting in any way.
Example 1: Isolation of Microbes from Plant Tissue
[0150] Topsoil was obtained from various agricultural areas in central California. Twenty soils with diverse texture characteristics were collected, including heavy clay, peaty clay loam, silty clay, and sandy loam. Seeds of various field corn, sweet corn, heritage corn and tomato were planted into each soil, as shown in Table 1.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Crop Type and Varieties planted into soil with diverse characteristics Crop Type Field Corn Sweet Corn Heritage Corn Tomato Varieties Mo17 Ferry-Morse Golden Victory Seeds Ferry-Morse Roma VF Cross Bantam T-51 Moseby Prolific B73 Ferry-Morse Silver Victory Seeds Reid's Stover Roma Queen Hybrid Yellow Dent DKC 66-40 Ferry-Morse Sugar Victory Seeds Hickory Totally Tomatoes Dots King Micro Tom Hybrid DKC 67-07 Heinz 1015 DKC 70-01 Heinz 2401 Heinz 3402 Heinz 5508 Heinz 5608 Heinz 8504
[0151] Plants were uprooted after 2-4 weeks of growth and excess soil on root surfaces was removed with deionized water. Following soil removal, plants were surface sterilized with bleach and rinsed vigorously in sterile water. A cleaned, 1 cm section of root was excised from the plant and placed in a phosphate buffered saline solution containing 3 mm steel beads. A slurry was generated by vigorous shaking of the solution with a Qiagen TissueLyser II.
[0152] The root and saline slurry was diluted and inoculated onto various types of growth media to isolate rhizospheric, endophytic, epiphytic, and other plant-associated microbes. R2A and Mb agar media were used to obtain single colonies, and semisolid Nfb media slants were used to obtain populations of nitrogen fixing bacteria. After 2-4 weeks incubation in semi-solid Nfb media slants, microbial populations were collected and streaked to obtain single colonies on R2A agar, as shown in
[0153] Isolates were then subjected to a colony PCR screen to detect the presence of the nifH gene in order to identify diazotrophs. The previously-described primer set Ueda 19F/388R, which has been shown to detect over 90% of diazotrophs in screens, was used to probe the presence of the nif cluster in each isolate (Ueda et al. 1995; J. Bacteriol. 177: 1414-1417). Single colonies of purified isolates were picked, resuspended in PBS, and used as a template for colony PCR, as shown in
Example 2: Characterization of Isolated Microbes
Sequencing, Analysis and Phylogenetic Characterization
[0154] Sequencing of 16S rDNA with the 515f-806r primer set was used to generate preliminary phylogenetic identities for isolated and candidate microbes (see e.g. Vernon et al.; BMC Microbiol. 2002 Dec. 23; 2:39). The microbes comprise diverse genera including: Enterobacter, Burkholderia, Klebsiella, Bradyrhizobium, Rahnella, Xanthomonas, Raoultella, Pantoea, Pseudomonas, Brevundimonas, Agrobacterium, and Paenibacillus, as shown in Table 2.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Diversity of microbes isolated from tomato plants as determined by deep 16S rDNA sequencing. Genus Isolates Achromobacter 7 Agrobacterium 117 Agromyces 1 Alicyclobacillus 1 Asticcacaulis 6 Bacillus 131 Bradyrhizobium 2 Brevibacillus 2 Burkholderia 2 Caulobacter 17 Chryseobacterium 42 Comamonas 1 Dyadobacter 2 Flavobacterium 46 Halomonas 3 Leptothrix 3 Lysobacter 2 Neisseria 13 Paenibacillus 1 Paenisporosarcina 3 Pantoea 14 Pedobacter 16 Pimelobacter 2 Pseudomonas 212 Rhizobium 4 Rhodoferax 1 Sphingobacterium 13 Sphingobium 23 Sphingomonas 3 Sphingopyxis 1 Stenotrophomonas 59 Streptococcus 3 Variovorax 37 Xylanimicrobium 1 unidentified 75
[0155] Subsequently, the genomes of 39 candidate microbes were sequenced using Illumina Miseq platform. Genomic DNA from pure cultures was extracted using the QIAmp DNA mini kit (QIAGEN), and total DNA libraries for sequencing were prepared through a third party vendor (SeqMatic, Hayward). Genome assembly was then carried out via the A5 pipeline (Tritt et al. 2012; PLoS One 7(9):e42304). Genes were identified and annotated, and those related to regulation and expression of nitrogen fixation were noted as targets for mutagenesis.
Transcriptomic Profiling of Candidate Microbes
[0156] Transcriptomic profiling of strain CI010 was performed to identify promoters that are active in the presence of environmental nitrogen. Strain CI010 was cultured in a defined, nitrogen-free media supplemented with 10 mM glutamine. Total RNA was extracted from these cultures (QIAGEN RNeasy kit) and subjected to RNAseq sequencing via Illumina HiSeq (SeqMatic, Fremont CA). Sequencing reads were mapped to CI010 genome data using Geneious, and highly expressed genes under control of proximal transcriptional promoters were identified. Tables 3A-C lists genes and their relative expression level as measured through RNASeq sequencing of total RNA. Sequences of the proximal promoters were recorded for use in mutagenesis of nif pathways, nitrogen utilization related pathways, or other genes with a desired expression level.
Assessment of Genetic Tractability
[0157] Candidate microbes were characterized based on transformability and genetic tractability. First, optimal carbon source utilization was determined by growth on a small panel of relevant media as well as a growth curve in both nitrogen-free and rich media. Second, the natural antibiotic resistance of each strain was determined through spot-plating and growth in liquid culture containing a panel of antibiotics used as selective markers for mutagenesis. Third, each strain was tested for its transformability through electroporation of a collection of plasmids. The plasmid collection comprises the combinatorial expansion of seven origins of replication, i.e., p15a, pSC101, CloDF, colA, RK2, pBBR1, and pRO1600 and four antibiotic resistance markers, i.e., CmR, KmR, SpecR, and TetR. This systematic evaluation of origin and resistance marker compatibility was used to identify vectors for plasmid-based mutagenesis in candidate microbes.
Example 3: Mutagenesis of Candidate Microbes
Lambda-Red Mediated Knockouts
[0158] Several mutants of candidate microbes were generated using the plasmid pKD46 or a derivative containing a kanamycin resistance marker (Datsenko et al. 2000; PNAS 97(12): 6640-6645). Knockout cassettes were designed with 250 bp homology flanking the target gene and generated via overlap extension PCR. Candidate microbes were transformed with pKD46, cultured in the presence of arabinose to induce Lambda-Red machinery expression, prepped for electroporation, and transformed with the knockout cassettes to produce candidate mutant strains. Four candidate microbes and one laboratory strain, Klebsiella oxytoca M5A1, were used to generate thirteen candidate mutants of the nitrogen fixation regulatory genes nifL, glnB, and amtB, as shown in Table 4.
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 4 List of single knockout mutants created through Lambda-red mutagenesis Strain nifL glnB amtB M5A1 X X X CI006 X X X CI010 X X X CI019 X X CI028 X X
Oligo-Directed Mutagenesis with Cas9 Selection
[0159] Oligo-directed mutagenesis was used to target genomic changes to the rpoB gene in E. coli DH10B, and mutants were selected with a CRISPR-Cas system. A mutagenic oligo (ss1283: G*T*T*G*ATCAGACCGATGTTCGGACCTTCcaagGTTTCGATCGGACATACGCGACCGTA GTGGGTCGGGTGTACGTCTCGAACTTCAAAGCC (SEQ ID NO: 2), where * denotes phosphorothioate bond) was designed to confer rifampicin resistance through a 4-bp mutation to the rpoB gene. Cells containing a plasmid encoding Cas9 were induced for Cas9 expression, prepped for electroporation, and then electroporated with both the mutagenic oligo and a plasmid encoding constitutive expression of a guide RNA (gRNA) that targets Cas9 cleavage of the WT rpoB sequence. Electroporated cells were recovered in nonselective media overnight to allow sufficient segregation of the resulting mutant chromosomes. After plating on selection for the gRNA-encoding plasmid, two out of ten colonies screened were shown to contain the desired mutation, while the rest were shown to be escape mutants generated through protospacer mutation in the gRNA plasmid or Cas9 plasmid loss.
Lambda-Red Mutagenesis with Cas9 Selection
[0160] Mutants of candidate microbes CI006 and CI010 were generated via lambda-red mutagenesis with selection by CRISPR-Cas. Knockout cassettes contained an endogenous promoter identified through transcriptional profiling (as described in Example 2 and depicted in Table 3) and 250 bp homology regions flanking the deletion target. CI006 and CI010 were transformed with plasmids encoding the Lambda-red recombination system (exo, beta, gam genes) under control of an arabinose inducible promoter and Cas9 under control of an IPTG inducible promoter. The Red recombination and Cas9 systems were induced in resulting transformants, and strains were prepared for electroporation. Knockout cassettes and a plasmid-encoded selection gRNA were subsequently transformed into the competent cells. After plating on antibiotics selective for both the Cas9 plasmid and the gRNA plasmid, 7 of the 10 colonies screened showed the intended knockout mutation, as shown in
Example 4: In Vitro Phenotyping of Candidate Molecules
[0161] The impact of exogenous nitrogen on nitrogenase biosynthesis and activity in various mutants was assessed. The Acetylene Reduction Assay (ARA) (Temme et. al. 2012; 109(18): 7085-7090) was used to measure nitrogenase activity in pure culture conditions. Strains were grown in air-tight test tubes, and reduction of acetylene to ethylene was quantified with an Agilent 6890 gas chromatograph. ARA activities of candidate microbes and counterpart candidate mutants grown in nitrogen fixation media supplemented with 0 to 10 mM glutamine are shown in
[0162] Under anaerobic culture conditions, a range of glutamine and ammonia concentrations was tested to quantify impact on nitrogen fixation activity. In wild-type cells, activity quickly diminished as glutamine concentrations increased. However, in a series of initial knock-out mutations, a class of mutation was validated enabling expression of nitrogen fixation genes under concentrations of glutamine that would otherwise shut off activity in wild type. This profile was generated in four different species of diazotrophs, as seen in
Transcription Profiling of Pure Cultures
[0163] Transcriptional activity of C1006 was measured using the Nanostring Elements platform. Cells were grown in nitrogen-free media and 10E8 cells were collected after 4 hours incubation. Total RNA was extracted using the Qiagen RNeasy kit. Purified RNA was submitted to Core Diagnostics in Palo Alto, CA, for probe hybridization and Digital Analyzer analysis, as shown in
Example 5: In Planta Phenotyping of Candidate Microbes
Colonization of Plants by Candidate Microbes
[0164] Colonization of desired host plants by a candidate microbe was quantified through short-term plant growth experiments. Corn plants were inoculated with strains expressing RFP either from a plasmid or from a Tn5-integrated RFP expression cassette. Plants were grown in both sterilized sand and nonsterile peat medium, and inoculation was performed by pipetting 1 mL of cell culture directly over the emerging plant coleoptile three days post-germination. Plasmids were maintained by watering plants with a solution containing the appropriate antibiotic. After three weeks, plant roots were collected, rinsed three times in sterile water to remove visible soil, and split into two samples. One root sample was analyzed via fluorescence microscopy to identify localization patterns of candidate microbes. Microscopy was performed on 10 mm lengths of the finest intact plant roots, as shown in
[0165] A second quantitative method for assessing colonization was developed. A quantitative PCR assay was performed on whole DNA preparations from the roots of plants inoculated with the endophytes. Seeds of corn (Dekalb DKC-66-40) were germinated in previously autoclaved sand in a 2.5 inch by 2.5 inch by 10 inch pot. One day after planting, 1 ml of endophyte overnight culture (SOB media) was drenched right at the spot of where the seed was located. 1 mL of this overnight culture is roughly equivalent to about 10{circumflex over ()}9 cfu, varying within 3-fold of each other, depending on which strain is being used. Each seedling was fertilized 3 weekly with 50 mL modified Hoagland's solution supplemented with either 2.5 mM or 0.25 mM ammonium nitrate. At four weeks after planting, root samples were collected for DNA extraction. Soil debris were washed away using pressurized water spray. These tissue samples were then homogenized using QIAGEN Tissuelyzer and the DNA was then extracted using QIAmp DNA Mini Kit (QIAGEN) according to the recommended protocol. qPCR assay was performed using Stratagene Mx3005P RT-PCR on these DNA extracts using primers that were designed (using NCBI's Primer BLAST) to be specific to a loci in each of the endophyte's genome. The presence of the genome copies of the endophytes was quantified. To further confirm the identity of the endophytes, the PCR amplification products were sequenced and are confirmed to have the correct sequence. The summary of the colonization profile of strain CI006 and CI008 from candidate microbes are presented in Table 5. Colonization rate as high as 10{circumflex over ()}7cfu/g fw of root was demonstrated in strain CI008.
TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 5 Colonization of corn as measured by qPCR Strain Colonization Rate (CFU/g fw) CI006 1.45 10{circumflex over ()}5 CI008 1.24 10{circumflex over ()}7
In Planta RNA Profiling
[0166] Biosynthesis of nif pathway components in planta was estimated by measuring the transcription of nif genes. Total RNA was obtained from root plant tissue of CI006 inoculated plants (planting methods as described previously). RNA extraction was performed using RNEasy Mini Kit according to the recommended protocol (QIAGEN). Total RNA from these plant tissues was then assayed using Nanostring Elements kits (NanoString Technologies, Inc.) using probes that were specific to the nif genes in the genome of strain CI006. The data of nif gene expression in planta is summarized in Table 6. Expression of nifH genes was detected in plants inoculated by CM013 strains whereas nifH expression was not detectable in CI006 inoculated plants. Strain CM013 is a derivative of strain CI006 in which the nifL gene has been knocked out.
[0167] Highly expressed genes of CM011, ranked by transcripts per kilobase million (TPM), were measured in planta under fertilized condition. The promoters controlling expression of some of these highly expressed genes were used as templates for homologous recombination into targeted nitrogen fixation and assimilation loci. RNA samples from greenhouse grown CM011 inoculated plant were extracted, rRNA removed using Ribo-Zero kit, sequenced using Illumina's Truseq platform and mapped back to the genome of CM011. Highly expressed genes from CM011 are listed in Table 7.
TABLE-US-00005 TABLE 6 Expression of nifH in planta Strains Relative Transcript Expression CI006 9.4 CM013 103.25
TABLE-US-00006 TABLE 7 TPM Raw (Transcripts Gene Read Per Kilobase Gene Name Location Direction Count Million) rpsH CDS 18196-18588 reverse 4841.5 27206.4 rplQ CDS 11650-12039 reverse 4333 24536.2 rpsJ CDS 25013-25324 reverse 3423 24229 rplV CDS 21946-22278 reverse 3367.5 22333 rpsN CDS 18622-18927 reverse 2792 20150.1 rplN CDS 19820-20191 reverse 3317 19691.8 rplF CDS 17649-18182 reverse 4504.5 18628.9 rpsD CDS 13095-13715 reverse 5091.5 18106.6 rpmF CDS 8326-8493 forward 1363.5 17923.8 rplW CDS 23429-23731 reverse 2252 16413.8 rpsM CDS 14153-14509 reverse 2269 14036.2 rplR CDS 17286-17639 reverse 2243.5 13996.1 rplC CDS 24350-24979 reverse 3985 13969.2 rplK CDS 25526-25954 reverse 2648.5 13634.1 rplP CDS 20807-21217 reverse 2423 13019.5 rplX CDS 19495-19809 reverse 1824 12787.8 rpsQ CDS 20362-20616 reverse 1460.5 12648.7 bhsA 3 CDS 79720-79977 reverse 1464 12531.5 rpmC CDS 20616-20807 reverse 998.5 11485 rpoA CDS 12080-13069 reverse 4855 10830.2 rplD CDS 23728-24333 reverse 2916.5 10628.5 bhsA 1 CDS 78883-79140 reverse 1068 9141.9 rpsS CDS 22293-22571 reverse 1138.5 9011.8 rpmA CDS 2210-2467 forward 1028.5 8803.7 rpmD CDS 16585-16764 reverse 694.5 8520.8 rplB CDS 22586-23410 reverse 3132 8384 rpsC CDS 21230-21928 reverse 2574.5 8133.9 rplE CDS 18941-19480 reverse 1972.5 8066.9 rplO CDS 16147-16581 reverse 1551 7874.2 preprotein translocase 14808-16139 reverse 4657 7721.2 subunit SecY CDS rpsE CDS 16771-17271 reverse 1671.5 7368 rpsK CDS 13746-14135 reverse 1223.5 6928.2 tufA CDS 27318-28229 reverse 2850 6901.3 rpmI CDS 38574-38771 forward 615 6859.5 rplU CDS 1880-2191 forward 935.5 6621.7 rplT CDS 38814-39170 forward 1045 6464.4 bhsA 2 CDS 79293-79550 reverse 754 6454.1 rpmB CDS 8391-8627 reverse 682 6355.1 rplJ CDS 23983-24480 reverse 1408 6243.9 fusA 2 CDS 481-2595 reverse 5832 6089.6 rpsA CDS 25062-26771 reverse 4613 5957.6 rpmJ CDS 14658-14774 reverse 314 5926.9 rpsR CDS 52990-53217 forward 603 5840.7 rpsG CDS 2692-3162 reverse 1243 5828.2 rpsI CDS 11354-11746 reverse 980.5 5509.8 cspC 1 CDS 8091-8300 reverse 509 5352.8 rpsF CDS 52270-52662 forward 916 5147.4 rpsT CDS 55208-55471 reverse 602 5035.9 infC CDS 38128-38478 forward 755 4750.3 cspG CDS 30148-30360 forward 446 4624.2
.SUP.15.N Assay
[0168] The primary method for demonstrating fixation uses the nitrogen isotope 15N, which is found in the atmosphere at a set rate relative to 14N. By supplementing either fertilizer or atmosphere with enriched levels of 15N, one can observe fixation either directly, in heightened amounts of 15N fixed from an atmosphere supplemented with 15N2 gas (Yoshida 1980), or inversely, through dilution of enriched fertilizer by atmospheric N2 gas in plant tissues (Iniguez 2004). The dilution method allows for the observation of cumulative fixed nitrogen over the course of plant growth, while the 15N.sub.2 gas method is restricted to measuring the fixation that occurs over the short interval that a plant can be grown in a contained atmosphere (rate measurement). Therefore, the gas method is superior in specificity (as any elevated 15N.sub.2 levels in the plant above the atmospheric rate can be attributed unambiguously to fixation) but cannot show cumulative activity.
[0169] Both types of assay has been performed to measure fixation activity of improved strains relative to wild-type and uninoculated corn plants, and elevated fixation rates were observed in planta for several of the improved strains (
Phytohormone Production Assay
[0170] The dwarf tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) cultivar Micro-Tom has previously been used to study the influence of indole-3-acetic acid on fruit ripening through an in vitro assay (Cohen 1996; J Am Soc Hortic Sci 121: 520-524). To evaluate phytohormone production and secretion by candidate microbes, a plate-based screening assay using immature Micro-Tom fruit was developed. Twelve-well tissue culture test plates were prepared by filling wells with agar medium, allowing it to solidify, and spotting 10 uL of overnight microbial cultures onto the agar surface, as shown in
Example 6: Cyclical Host-Microbe Evolution
[0171] Corn plants were inoculated with CM013 and grown 4 weeks to approximately the V5 growth stage. Those demonstrating improved nitrogen accumulation from microbial sources via .sup.15N analysis were uprooted, and roots were washed using pressurized water to remove bulk soil. A 0.25 g section of root was cut and rinsed in PBS solution to remove fine soil particles and non-adherent microbes. Tissue samples were homogenized using 3 mm steel beads in QIAGEN TissueLyser II. The homogenate was diluted and plated on SOB agar media. Single colonies were resuspended in liquid media and subjected to PCR analysis of 16s rDNA and mutations unique to the inoculating strain. The process of microbe isolation, mutagenesis, inoculation, and re-isolation can be repeated iteratively to improve microbial traits, plant traits, and the colonization capability of the microbe.
Example 7: Compatibility Across Geography
[0172] The ability of the improved microbes to colonize an inoculated plant is critical to the success of the plant under field conditions. While the described isolation methods are designed to select from soil microbes that may have a close relationship with crop plants such as corn, many strains may not colonize effectively across a range of plant genotypes, environments, soil types, or inoculation conditions. Since colonization is a complex process requiring a range of interactions between a microbial strain and host plant, screening for colonization competence has become a central method for selecting priority strains for further development. Early efforts to assess colonization used fluorescent tagging of strains, which was effective but time-consuming and not scalable on a per-strain basis. As colonization activity is not amenable to straightforward improvement, it is imperative that potential product candidates are selected from strains that are natural colonizers.
[0173] An assay was designed to test for robust colonization of the wild-type strains in any given host plant using qPCR and primers designed to be strain-specific in a community sample. This assay is intended to rapidly measure the colonization rate of the microbes from corn tissue samples. Initial tests using strains assessed as probable colonizers using fluorescence microscopy and plate-based techniques indicated that a qPCR approach would be both quantitative and scalable.
[0174] A typical assay is performed as follows: Plants, mostly varieties of maize and wheat, are grown in a peat potting mix in the greenhouse in replicates of six per strain. At four or five days after planting, a 1 mL drench of early stationary phase cultures of bacteria diluted to an OD590 of 0.6-1.0 (approximately 5E+08 CFU/mL) is pipetted over the emerging coleoptile. The plants are watered with tap water only and allowed to grow for four weeks before sampling, at which time, the plants are uprooted and the roots washed thoroughly to remove most peat residues. Samples of clean root are excised and homogenized to create a slurry of plant cell debris and associated bacterial cells. We developed a high-throughput DNA extraction protocol that effectively produced a mixture of plant and bacterial DNA to use as template for qPCR. Based on bacterial cell spike-in experiments, this DNA extraction process provides a quantitative bacterial DNA sample relative to the fresh weight of the roots. Each strain is assessed using strain-specific primers designed using Primer BLAST (Ye 2012) and compared to background amplification from uninoculated plants. Since some primers exhibit off-target amplification in uninoculated plants, colonization is determined either by presence of amplification or elevated amplification of the correct product compared to the background level.
[0175] This assay was used to measure the compatibility of the microbial product across different soil geography. Field soil qualities and field conditions can have a huge influence on the effect of a microbial product. Soil pH, water retention capacity, and competitive microbes are only a few examples of factors in soil that can affect inoculum survival and colonization ability. A colonization assay was performed using three diverse soil types sampled from agricultural fields in California as the plant growth medium (
[0176] Additionally, to assessment colonization in the complexity of field conditions, a 1-acre field trial in in San Luis Obispo in June of 2015 was initiated to assess the impacts and colonization of seven of the wild-type strains in two varieties of field corn. Agronomic design and execution of the trial was performed by a contract field research organization, Pacific Ag Research. For inoculation, the same peat culture seed coating technique tested in the inoculation methods experiment was employed. During the course of the growing season, plant samples were collected to assess for colonization in the root and stem interior. Samples were collected from three replicate plots of each treatment at four and eight weeks after planting, and from all six reps of each treatment shortly before harvest at 16 weeks. Additional samples were collected from all six replicate plots of treatments inoculated with Strain 1 and Strain 2, as well as untreated controls, at 12 weeks. Numbers of cells per gram fresh weight of washed roots were assessed as with other colonization assays with qPCR and strain-specific primers. Two strains, Strain 1 and Strain 2, showed consistent and widespread root colonization that peaked at 12 weeks and then declined precipitously (
[0177] The use of the terms a and an and the and similar referents in the context of describing the invention (especially in the context of the following claims) are to be construed to cover both the singular and the plural, unless otherwise indicated herein or clearly contradicted by context. The terms comprising, having, including, and containing are to be construed as open-ended terms (i.e., meaning including, but not limited to,) unless otherwise noted. Recitation of ranges of values herein are merely intended to serve as a shorthand method of referring individually to each separate value falling within the range, unless otherwise indicated herein, and each separate value is incorporated into the specification as if it were individually recited herein. For example, if the range 10-15 is disclosed, then 11, 12, 13, and 14 are also disclosed. All methods described herein can be performed in any suitable order unless otherwise indicated herein or otherwise clearly contradicted by context. The use of any and all examples, or exemplary language (e.g., such as) provided herein, is intended merely to better illuminate the invention and does not pose a limitation on the scope of the invention unless otherwise claimed. No language in the specification should be construed as indicating any non-claimed element as essential to the practice of the invention.
[0178] While preferred embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes, and substitutions will now occur to those skilled in the art without departing from the invention. It should be understood that various alternatives to the embodiments of the invention described herein may be employed in practicing the invention. It is intended that the following claims define the scope of the invention and that methods and structures within the scope of these claims and their equivalents be covered thereby.
TABLE-US-00007 TABLE 3A Name Minimum Maximum Length Direction murein lipoprotein CDS 2,929,898 2,930,134 237 forward membrane protein CDS 5,217,517 5,217,843 327 forward zinc/cadmium-binding 3,479,979 3,480,626 648 forward protein CDS acyl carrier protein CDS 4,563,344 4,563,580 237 reverse ompX CDS 4,251,002 4,251,514 513 forward DNA-binding protein 375,156 375,428 273 forward HU-beta CDS sspA CDS 629,998 630,636 639 reverse tatE CDS 3,199,435 3,199,638 204 reverse LexA repressor CDS 1,850,457 1,851,065 609 forward hisS CDS <3999979 4,001,223 >1245 forward
TABLE-US-00008 TABLE 3B Differential Expression Differential RNASeq_nifL - RNASeq_nifL - RNASeq_WT - RNASeq_WT - Absolute Expression Raw Read Raw Transcript Raw Read Raw Transcript Name Confidence Ratio Count Count Count Count murein 1000 1.8 12950.5 10078.9 5151.5 4106.8 lipoprotein CDS membrane 1000 1.3 9522.5 5371.3 5400 3120 protein CDS zinc/cadmium- 3.3 1.1 6461 1839.1 5318 1550.6 binding protein CDS acyl carrier 25.6 1.6 1230.5 957.6 1473.5 1174.7 protein CDS ompX CDS 1.7 1.1 2042 734.2 1687.5 621.5 DNA-binding 6.9 1.3 1305 881.7 725 501.8 protein HU- beta CDS sspA CDS 0.2 1 654 188.8 504.5 149.2 tatE CDS 1.4 1.3 131 118.4 125 115.8 LexA 0.1 1.1 248 75.1 164 50.9 repressor CDS hisS CDS 0 1.1 467 69.2 325 49.3
TABLE-US-00009 TABLEC Prm(InForward direction, SEQ SEQ SEQ 250to+10 ID Expressed ID Neighbor ID Name region) NO: Sequence NO: Sequence NO: murein GCCTCTCGGGGCG 3 ATGAATCGTACTA 13 ATGAAAAAGACCA 23 lipoprotein CTTTTTTTTATTCC AACTGGTACTGGG AAATTGTTTGCACC CDS GGCACTAGCCGCT CGCGGTAATCCTG ATCGGTCCGAAAA ATTAATAAAAATG GGTTCTACTCTGCT CCGAATCCGAAGA CAAATCGGAATTT GGCTGGTTGCTCCA GATGTTGACCAAA ACTATTTAACGCG GCAATGCTAAAAT ATGCTGGACGCGG AGATTATCTAAGA CGATCAGCTGTCTT GCATGAACGTTAT TGAATCCGATGGA CTGACGTTCAGACT GCGTCTGAACTTCT AGCGCGCTGTTTTC CTGAACGCTAAAG CTCACGGTGACTAT ACTCGCCTTTTTAA TTGACCAGCTGAG GCGGAACACGGTC AGTTACGTGATGA CAACGACGTGAAC AGCGCATCCAGAA TTTCGATGCTTCTT GCAATGCGTTCCG TCTGCGCAATGTG TGAGCGAACGATC ACGTTCAGGCTGCT ATGAGTAAAACCG AAAAATAAGCGTA AAAGATGACGCAG GTAAGAAAGCGGC TTCAGGTAAAAAA CTCGCGCTAACCA AATCCTGCTGGAC ATATTCTCATCACA GCGTCTGGACAAC ACCAAAGGTCCGG AAAAAGTTTGTGT GCAGCTACTAAAT AAATCCGTACCATT AATACTTGTAACG ACCGTAAGTAA AAGCTGGAAGGCG CT--- GCAACGACGTCTC ACATGGAGATTAA CCTGAAAGCGGGC CTC CAGACCTTCACCTT CACCACCGATAAA TCCGTTGTCGGTAA TAACGAAATCGTT GCGGTGACCTATG AAGGCTTCACCAG CGACCTGAGCGTT GGCAACACGGTAC TGGTTGACGATGG TCTGATCGGTATGG AAGTGACCGCTAT CGAAGGCAACAAA GTTGTTTGTAAAGT GCTGAACAACGGC GACCTCGGCGAGA ACAAAGGCGTTAA CCTGCCGGGCGTA TCTATCGCGCTGCC GGCGCTGGCTGAA AAAGACAAACAGG ATCTGATCTTCGGT TGCGAACAGGGCG TTGACTTTGTTGCG GCATCCTTTATCCG TAAGCGTTCTGAC GTTGTTGAAATCCG TGAGCACCTGAAA GCCCACGGCGGCG AGAAGATCCAGAT CATCTCCAAAATC GAAAACCAGGAAG GCCTGAACAACTT CGACGAAATCCTC GAAGCCTCTGACG GCATCATGGTAGC CCGTGGCGACCTG GGCGTTGAAATCC CGGTTGAAGAAGT TATCTTCGCGCAGA AGATGATGATCGA GAAATGTATCCGC GCGCGTAAAGTCG TTATCACCGCGACC CAGATGCTGGATT CCATGATCAAAAA CCCGCGTCCGACC CGTGCGGAAGCAG GCGACGTGGCCAA CGCCATCCTCGAC GGCACCGACGCAG TTATGCTGTCCGGC GAATCCGCGAAAG GTAAATACCCGCT GGAAGCGGTCACC ATCATGGCGACCA TCTGCGAACGTAC CGACCGCGTCATG ACCAGCCGTCTTG AGTACAACAACGA CAACCGTAAGCTG CGCATCACCGAAG CGGTGTGCCGCGG TGCGGTAGAAACG GCTGAAAAACTGG AAGCGCCGCTGAT CGTTGTGGCAACC CAGGGCGGTAAAT CCGCGCGCGCCGT ACGTAAATACTTCC CGGATGCCACTAT CCTGGCGCTGACC ACCAACGAAACCA CCGCGCGTCAGCT GGTGCTGAGCAAA GGCGTTGTGGCAC AGCTGGTTGAAGA TATCTCCTCTACCG ATGCGTTCTACATC CAGGGTAAAGAAC TGGCGCTGCAGAG CGGTCTGGCGCGT AAAGGCGACGTGG TTGTTATGGTTTCC GGCGCGTTAGTCC CGAGCGGAACCAC CAATACCGCTTCCG TGCACGTGCTGTA A membrane GGTTCACATAAAC 4 ATGGCCAACCGAG 14 ATGTATTTAAGACC 24 protein ATAATTATCGCCAC CAAACCGCAACAA CGATGAGGTGGCG CDS GGCGATAGCCGTA CGTAGAAGAGAGC CGTGTTCTTGAAAA CGCTTTTTGCGTCA GCTGAAGATATCC AGCCGGCTTCACC CAACATCCATGGT ATAACGATGTCAG ATGGATGTTGTGA GAAGCCGGCTTTTT CCAATTAGCGGAT CGCAAAAAGCGTA CAAGAACACGCGC ACGCTGGAAGAGG CGGCTATCGCCGT CACCTCATCGGGTC TGCTGAAATCGTG GGCGATAATTATG TTAAATACATACTC GGGCAGCGACGCC TTTATGTGAACCGT ATTCCTCATTATCT AAAGACGAAGCGG GAAGCTCGTATGG TTTACCGCACGTTA AGGCCGCGCGCAA GGCGTACCGCGTT ACCTTACCTTATTC AAAAGCGCAGGCG AATTATTCATCCGG ATTAAAGGCAACG CTGCTGAAAGAGA CTTTAAAAGAGCG CTTTCGGAATATTC CCCGCGCCCGGCTT CAGCACAACGCTT CATAAAGGGCTAT AACGGCAACAACC GCGGAGCCCGCGT TTACAGCATAATTC GCGTCCAGCAGGC CGGATATCAAAAC AAAATCTTGTCCTA GGCGTGCGACGCC CTGCGATCATTATG CACTTATAGACTCA ATGGGCTGCGCTG AGCAGTTCCCGCTC ATGGAATTAAGGG ACAGCTACGTGCG TATTTAGCGGGGG A CGACAAACCGTGG ATGCTCAACAGCA CAAAGCGTCGGCG TTATGGTATTCCAC CCGCAGCAGCCGT ACGGGTTCAGTTC TGGGGTATTTATTG GCGAATGGCGCTT GCGTATTACTGAAT GAGCGTTTTCTGAG TTACGTCGATAA TGGCCTGTTTGGCG AAACGCAGTATAG CTGA zinc/cadmium- GCGCGGAAAATCG 5 ATGACCAAAAAGA 15 ATGGATAGCGACA 25 binding ACGCATAGCGCAT TTTCCGCCCTAGCG TTAATCAGGTCATT protein TCTCAGAAGCCGG TTTGGCATTGGCAT GATTCTTTTGTTAA CDS CCTGGTCTCGGTGG GGTAATGGCGAGC AGGCCCGGCGGTC AAAAGCGAATCTT AGCCAGGCTTTTGC GTGGGAAAGATTC TCCCACGACCGCC CCACGGTCACCAT GCTTTTCCACCGAG GGGCCTTTAACAA AGTCATGGCCCGG ACCAGGCCGGCTT AAGAATCAATGAC CGCTGACCGAAGC CTGAGAATGCGCT CTGATTAATGTCGC GGAACAAAAGGCG ATGCGTCGATTTTC TATCCATTCTCTCT AGTGAAGGCATTT CGCGCCTCGAAAT CCGCGTAATGCGA TTGCTGACCAGGA CATGCTTGCGGGTC TCTTTTTTCATCAT CGTAAAGGACAGG AGCTTCACGATCC ACCTAACAAACTG GCGCTGAGCGACT GGCGATTAAAGCC GCAGAGGGAAAAG GGGAGGGGATCTG GATCGCGCCCAGC CCGCGCGGTTTTTC GCAGTCGGTTAAC TCATGCCGCACGA TGCGAAGTGTATT CCCTATCTGCTGAA TGTGCTGTATATTC GTAAGATTTGTTTG CGGGGATTTAGAT CCGCTGGCGGATG ATATGTTATATCGT CCGGTTCTGGAGC GAATGACCCGCAA AACATATTATTGCA AGAAGGCCAAAAA TGGCTGGCGCCCTC AACAT GGCCGGTAAAAGC CACTCTGCTCACTA GTGGCGGAATATC TCTTATTTGGTAAA GGGAATATTATAA CAGCAGCTGGAAT GAAGGGCTACGCT TCGTCCTGCGCCAC ACCGATGTCGACC TGGGACGGCAGCG AGATTGGTATCGA CGCTTAACGTGCTG GGATAACGTCATG GATAAACAGCAGG GAGTTTCACGTCG TTCCGCGCCGCGGT GGAAAACCGTCAA CCCCGGGTCGGCT CGCCTGTAAGTAC CTTTTCTGCTGCAG AGCTATTCCGGTTA GCGCTGAATGAAA CAAAATTCTGACCT TGCAGATGCAGCC ACGCATCCGGTAA GCGGGAGCAGCAC AAAAGGCGTGCGC ACGGCCCGCTTTAT TACCTGTTCGAATG TGTCACCAGCCTGC CCAGCAGGCGGAT TCAGCCACTGTGCC TCAAAAGCGCCGA GATCTGCTGGGCA AGTTTGTTCAGTTT GCCAGGTACAAAC AGCGATCACACCA CTCATCGCGCAGC TCGCGCCACGCAA CAGGCGCTTTTTGA GTCCCAGCATTTCC AGCGATTCGTAAG ACATCTTTATGGGC CATATTGACGCCC AATGAGTCCCAGG ACTTTGCCGACCCG AAGCGCTGCTGAA TTAACCCGGGAGT AGAGATGGATAAC CGGTGGCGCAGGC TGGCCAACCTACT GTTTTACCTCTCGC ATCCTTATGCGCTG CAAACTATCTATCC CATAAAGAGCAGA CACCTGTTCCAGA TTGTCGACGAAAT AATGCGGGCCAAT GCTGCACCACTAA GGGCTTTAACGAG TATCTGAATCACAT CCGCCTGGAGCAG GCCAGAATGCTGT TAAAAGGCCACGA TATGAAAGTGAAA GATATCGCCCACG CCTGCGGTTTCGCC GACAGCAACTACT TCTGCCGCCTGTTT CGCAAAAACACCG AACGCTCGCCGTC GGAGTATCGCCGT CAATATCACAGCC AGCTGACGGAAAA AACAGCCCCGGCA AAAAACTAG acylcarrier CTGACGAAGCGAG 6 ATGAGCACTATCG 16 ATGAGTTTTGAAG 26 protein TTACATCACCGGTG AAGAACGCGTTAA GAAAAATCGCGCT CDS AAACTCTGCACGT GAAAATTATCGGC GGTTACCGGTGCA CAACGGCGGAATG GAACAGCTGGGCG AGTCGCGGGATTG TATATGGTCTGACC TTAAGCAGGAAGA GCCGCGCAATCGC GAGATTTGCGCAA AGTTACCAACAAT TGAAACGCTCGTT AACGCTCAGGAAC GCTTCCTTCGTTGA GCCCGTGGCGCGA CGCGCAGTCTGTG AGACCTGGGCGCT AAGTTATCGGGAC CGGTTCACTGTAAT GATTCTCTTGACAC TGCGACCAGCGAA GTTTTGTACAAAAT CGTTGAGCTGGTA AGCGGCGCGCAGG GATTTGCGTTATGA ATGGCTCTGGAAG CGATCAGCGATTA GGGCAAACAGCCG AAGAGTTTGATAC TTTAGGTGCTAACG CAAAATAGCGTAA TGAGATTCCGGAC GTAAAGGTCTGCT AATCGTGGTAAGA GAAGAAGCTGAGA GCTGAATGTGACC CCTGCCGGGATTTA AAATCACTACTGTT GATCCTGCATCTAT GTTGCAAATTTTTC CAGGCTGCCATTG TGAATCTGTTCTGG AACATTTTATACAC ATTACATCAACGG GAAATATTCGCGC TACGAAAACCATC CCACCAGGCGTAA AGAATTTGGTGAA GCGAAAGCGAGTT GTTGATATCCTGGT TTGA GAACAATGCCGGG ATCACTCGTGATA ACCTGTTAATGCGC ATGAAAGATGATG AGTGGAACGATAT TATCGAAACCAAC CTGTCATCTGTTTT CCGTCTGTCAAAA GCGGTAATGCGCG CTATGATGAAAAA GCGTCATGGACGT ATTATCACTATCGG TTCTGTGGTTGGTA CCATGGGAAATGC GGGTCAGGCCAAC TACGCTGCGGCGA AAGCGGGTCTGAT TGGCTTCAGTAAAT CACTGGCTCGCGA AGTTGCGTCCCGC GGTATTACTGTAA ACGTTGTTGCTCCG GGCTTTATTGAAAC GGACATGACGCGT GCGCTGACCGATG AGCAGCGTGCGGG TACGCTGGCGGCA GTTCCTGCGGGGC GCCTCGGCTCTCCA AATGAAATCGCCA GTGCGGTGGCATTT TTAGCCTCTGACGA AGCGAGTTACATC ACCGGTGAAACTC TGCACGTCAACGG CGGAATGTATATG GTCTGA ompXCDS ACGCCTGGGGCGC 7 ATGAATAAAATTG 17 ATGCCCGGCTCGTC 27 CGACCAGCGGGAA CACGTTTTTCAGCA TCGTAAGGTACCG GAGTGATTTGGCC CTGGCCGTTGTTCT GCATGGTTGCCGA AACGAGGCGCCGC GGCTGCATCCGTA TACTGGTTATTTTA TCTGAATGGAAAT GGTACCACTGCTTT ATCGCCATGATTTC CATGGCGATTAAA CGCTGCGACTTCTA CAT ATAACCAGTATCG CCGTTACCGGTGG GCAACCATGCCGG CTACGCGCAGAGC TACCTTACGAGAC GACATGCAGGGTG GAGCCGGGCATCC AAGCGAACAAAGC TTTCTCCTGTCAAT TGGCGGTTTCAACC TTTGTCAAATGCGG TGAAGTACCGCTA TAAAGGTTCCAGT CGAGCAAGACAAC GTAATTGAATTACC AACCCGCTGGGTG CCGCGCCGGTTGA TTATCGGTTCTTTC GCTAATGTTGAAA ACCTACACCGAAA AAAAGGGTCTTAA AAGATCGTTCTGA AAGCAGTACAATA ATCTGGCGTTTACA GGGCGGGTCTGAA AAAAAGGCCAGTA GATAATTTCA CTACGGCATCACC GCAGGTCCGGCTT ACCGTCTGAACGA CTGGGCTAGCATCT ACGGCGTAGTGGG TGTTGGTTACGGTA AATTCCAGGACAA CAGCTACCCGAAC AAATCTGATATGA GCGACTACGGTTTC TCTTACGGCGCTGG TCTGCAGTTCAACC CGATCGAAAACGT TGCCCTGGACTTCT CCTACGAGCAGTC TCGCATTCGTAACG TTGACGTTGGCACC TGGATTGCTGGCGT AGGTTACCGCTTCT AA DNA- TCTGATTCCTGATG 8 GTGAATAAATCTC 18 ATGAATCCTGAGC 28 binding AAAATAAACGCGA AACTGATTGACAA GTTCTGAACGCATT proteinHU- CCTTGAAGAAATT AATTGCTGCCGGT GAAATCCCCGTATT betaCDS CCGGATAACGTTA GCGGACATTTCTA GCCGTTGCGCGAT TCGCCGATTTAGAT AAGCCGCAGCTGG GTGGTGGTTTATCC ATCCATCCGGTGA ACGTGCGTTAGAT GCACATGGTCATA AACGAATCGAGGA GCTTTAATCGCTTC CCCCTGTTTGTAGG AGTTCTGGCACTTG TGTTACTGAATCTC GCGGGAAAAATCT CGCTACAGAACGA TGCAGGCTGGAGA ATCCGTTGTCTCGA ACCGTTTGGAATG TGACGTTGCGCTG AGCAGCCATGGAC GAAGTCGTCACGG GTAGGGTTTGGTA CATGATAAAAAAA CAAAATAGTGATT CTTTTGCTGTTAAA TCATGCTGGTTGCG TCGCGCAAATAGC GAGCGCGCTGCCC CAGAAAGAAGCCT GCTAAGAAAAATA GTACTGGTCGCAA CGACGGATGAGCC GGGCTGGTAAGTA TCCGCAAACAGGC GGGTGTAAACGAT AATTCGTACTTGCC AAAGAAATCACCA CTTTTCACCGTCGG AGCCTTTTTTTGTG TTGCTGCTGCTAAA GACCGTGGCGTCT TAGCTAACTTAGAT GTTCCGGGTTTCCG ATTTTGCAAATGCT CGCTGGCAGGGGG CGCAGGTAAAGCG GAAGCTACCGGAC GTCAATT CTGAAAGACGCGG GGTACTGTTAAAG TAAACTGA TGCTGGTCGAAGG TTTGCAGCGCGCG CGCATCTCTGCGCT GTCTGATAATGGC GAACATTTTTCGGC GAAGGCGGAATAC CTTGAATCGCCGG CGATTGACGAACG CGAGCAGGAAGTG CTGGTTCGTACCGC TATCAGCCAGTTTG AAGGCTACATCAA GCTGAACAAAAAA ATCCCTCCGGAAG TGCTGACGTCGCTG AATAGCATCGACG ATCCGGCGCGTCT GGCGGATACCATC GCTGCGCATATGC CGCTGAAGCTGGC GGACAAACAGTCC GTGCTGGAGATGT CCGACGTTAACGA GCGTCTGGAATAT CTGATGGCGATGA TGGAGTCGGAAAT CGATCTGCTGCAG GTGGAGAAGCGTA TTCGCAACCGCGT GAAAAAGCAGATG GAGAAATCTCAGC GCGAGTACTATCT GAATGAGCAAATG AAAGCCATTCAAA AAGAGCTCGGCGA GATGGACGACGCC CCGGACGAGAACG AAGCGCTGAAGCG TAAGATCGACGCG GCGAAAATGCCGA AAGAGGCAAAAGA GAAAACCGAAGCG GAACTGCAAAAAC TGAAAATGATGTC CCCGATGTCGGCG GAAGCGACCGTCG TTCGCGGCTACATC GACTGGATGGTGC AGGTACCGTGGAA CGCTCGCAGCAAG GTTAAAAAAGACC TGCGTCAGGCTCA GGAGATCCTCGAT ACCGATCACTACG GCCTTGAGCGCGT GAAGGATCGCATT CTTGAGTACCTCGC GGTGCAGAGCCGT GTTAACAAGCTCA AAGGGCCGATCCT GTGCCTGGTTGGG CCTCCGGGGGTAG GTAAAACCTCTCTC GGCCAATCCATCG CCAAAGCAACTGG ACGCAAATATGTG CGTATGGCGCTGG GCGGCGTGCGTGA TGAAGCGGAAATC CGCGGTCACCGCC GTACCTATATTGGC TCAATGCCGGGCA AACTGATCCAGAA AATGGCTAAAGTG GGCGTTAAAAACC CGCTGTTCTTGCTG GATGAGATCGACA AGATGTCTTCTGAC ATGCGCGGCGATC CGGCCTCGGCGCT GCTGGAGGTGTTG GATCCGGAACAGA ACGTGGCCTTTAAC GACCACTATCTGG AAGTGGATTACGA TCTCAGCGACGTG ATGTTCGTTGCGAC CTCTAACTCCATGA ACATCCCGGCGCC GCTGCTGGATCGT ATGGAAGTGATCC GCCTCTCCGGCTAT ACCGAAGATGAGA AGCTAAACATCGC CAAACGCCATCTG CTGTCAAAACAGA TTGAGCGTAACGC GCTCAAGAAAGGC GAGCTGACGGTGG ATGACAGCGCGAT TATCGGCATCATTC GCTACTACACCCGT GAAGCAGGCGTGC GTGGTCTGGAGCG TGAAATCTCGAAA CTGTGCCGCAAAG CGGTGAAACAGCT GCTGCTGGATAAG TCGCTGAAACACA TCGAGATTAACGG CGACAACCTGCAC GATTTCCTTGGCGT GCAGCGCTACGAC TATGGTCGTGCGG ATAGCGAAAACCG CGTAGGTCAGGTG ACCGGACTGGCGT GGACGGAAGTGGG CGGCGATCTGCTG ACCATTGAAACCG CCTGCGTTCCGGGT AAAGGCAAACTGA CCTACACCGGTTCA CTGGGTGAAGTCA TGCAGGAATCCAT CCAGGCGGCGCTG ACGGTGGTTCGTTC ACGTGCGGATAAG CTGGGTATTAACTC AGACTTTTACGAA AAACGTGATATTC ACGTTCACGTGCC GGAAGGCGCGACG CCGAAGGATGGTC CAAGCGCCGGTAT CGCGATGTGCACC GCGCTGGTTTCCTG TCTGACGGGTAAT CCGGTACGCGCCG ACGTGGCGATGAC CGGTGAGATTACC CTCCGTGGCCAGG TATTGCCGATTGGT GGTCTGAAGGAAA AACTGTTGGCCGC GCATCGCGGCGGC ATTAAGACTGTTCT GATTCCTGATGAA AATAAACGCGACC TTGAAGAAATTCC GGATAACGTTATC GCCGATTTAGATAT CCATCCGGTGAAA CGAATCGAGGAAG TTCTGGCACTTGCG CTACAGAACGAAC CGTTTGGAATGGA AGTCGTCACGGCA AAATAG sspACDS GTAAGAAAGTCGG 9 ATGGCTGTCGCTGC 19 ATGGCTGAAAATC 29 CCTGCGTAAAGCA CAACAAACGTTCG AATACTACGGCAC CGTCGTCGTCCTCA GTAATGACGCTGTT CGGTCGCCGCAAA GTTCTCCAAACGTT TTCTGGTCCTACTG AGTTCCGCAGCTC AATTGTTTTCTGCT ACATCTATAGCCAT GCGTTTTCATCAAA CACGCAGAACAAT CAGGTCCGCATCG CCGGGCAACGGTA TTGCGAAAAAACC TGCTGGCCGAAAA AAATCGTTATCAA CGCTTCGGCGGGTT AGGTGTTAGTTTTG CCAGCGTTCTCTGG TTTTTATGGATAAA AGATAGAGCACGT AACAGTACTTCGG TTTGCCATTTTCCC GGAGAAGGACAAC TCGTGAAACTGCC TCTACAAACGCCC CCGCCTCAGGATCT CGCATGGTAGTTC CATTGTTACCACTT GATTGACCTCAAC GTCAGCCGCTGGA TTTCAGCATTTCCA CCGAATCAAAGCG ACTGGTCGACATG GAATCCCCTCACC TACCGACGCTTGTG GTTGAGAAATTAG ACAACGTCTTCAA GATCGTGAGCTCA ATCTGTACATCACC AATCTGGTAAACT CTCTGTGGGAATCT GTTAAAGGTGGTG ATCATCCAATTTTC CGCATCATTATGG GTATCTCTGGTCAG TGCCCAAATGCAG AATATCTGGATGA GCTGGTGCGATCC GTGATTGTTCATTT GCGTTTCCCGCATC GTCACGGTATCAC TT CGCCGCTCATGCC CCGCGCTCTGATG GGTTTACCCGGTG GAGTACGACGAGT GCGCGTGGGGAAA CCCTGCGTGGCGA GCCGTCTGTATATG ACTGCGTAAAGCT CAGCGTATCGAAA GGTTTCGTTACTCG AGGACTGGTATTC TGATGCTCGTCAG GTTGATGAATACC GTTGAACGTAAGA ATTCAGACCGGTA AAGTCGGCCTGCG CCGCTGCGCAGGC TAAAGCACGTCGT TGATACTGCGCGT CGTCCTCAGTTCTC AAGCAGCTGCGTG CAAACGTTAA AAGAACTACAGGC GATTGCGCCAGTTT TCACCCAGAAGCC CTACTTCCTGAGCG ATGAGTTCAGCCT GGTGGACTGCTAC CTGGCACCACTGCT GTGGCGTCTGCCG GTTCTCGGCGTAG AGCTGGTCGGCGC TGGCGCGAAAGAG CTTAAAGGCTATAT GACTCGCGTATTTG AGCGCGACTCTTTC CTCGCTTCTTTAAC TGAAGCCGAACGT GAAATGCGTCTCG GTCGGGGCTAA tatECDS GTCAAAGCCGTAT 10 ATGGGTGAGATTA 20 ATGTTTGTTGCTGC 30 TATCGACCCCTTAG GTATTACCAAACT CGGACAATTTGCC GGACAACGCTTGC GCTGGTAGTCGCA GTAACGCCGGACT CGGGGGGGGAGAG GCGCTGATTATCCT GGACGGGAAACGC CGGCCGCAGTTGA GGTGTTTGGTACCA GCAGACCTGCGTC TTTTTGCCGAACTT AAAAGTTACGCAC AGCATGATGCGCC TCAGCTGATTATAT GCTGGGTGGAGAC AGGCCGCGGAGCG TCAGCAGGTACGC CTGGGCTCGGCTAT GGGGGCGTCGCTT GAGCGCCTGCCGG CAAAGGCTTTAAA CTGGTTCTGCCTGA TGTTGCGCAATCGC AAAGCCATGAGCG GGCGTTGCTGGCG CGCTTTGCGCCACC ATGACGATGACAG CGAGACGATAACG GCAATTATTATGAC TGCGAAGAAGACC ATGCGGATTTATCG GTTTTTTTAAACAA AGTGCTGAAGAAG GTTAAATCCGCCC GGCTTGATTCACCT CGCCGGCACAGAA AGCAGCTGGATGG TGTTACAGATTGCT GCTCTCTCATAAAG CGGCTTCTTACAGC ATTGTGTCCGCGCG AGTAA TCTTGCTGGCGGA TCAAATAGCCGTT GAGCGAAAACAGC AATTGTATGCGTGT GCTTTGACGACGG ATGATGGCGTATTC TGCTGACCCTGCAT G ATCCCTTCCGGCGA AGGTCGAGCGACG AATACGCTGGTGG CCCTGCGTCAGGG GAAGATTGTGGCG CAATATCAGAAAC TGCATCTCTATGAT GCGTTCAATATCCA GGAATCCAGGCTG GTCGATGCCGGGC GGCAAATTCCGCC GCTGATCGAAGTC GACGGGATGCGCG TCGGGCTGATGAC CTGCTACGATTTAC GTTTCCCTGAGCTG GCGCTGTCGTTAGC GCTCAGCGGCGCG CAGCTCATAGTGTT GCCTGCCGCGTGG GTAAAAGGGCCGC TGAAGGAACATCA CTGGGCGACGCTG CTGGCGGCGCGGG CGCTGGATACAAC CTGCTATATTGTCG CCGCAGGAGAGTG CGGGACGCGTAAT ATCGGTCAAAGCC GTATTATCGACCCC TTAGGGACAACGC TTGCCGGGGCGGG AGAGCGGCCGCAG TTGATTTTTGCCGA ACTTTCAGCTGATT ATATTCAGCAGGT ACGCGAGCGCCTG CCGGTGTTGCGCA ATCGCCGCTTTGCG CCACCGCAATTATT ATGA LexA GAGGCGGTGGTTG 11 ATGAAAGCGTTAA 21 ATGGCCAATAATA 31 repressor ACCGTATCGGTCCC CGACCAGGCAGCA CCACTGGGTTAAC CDS GAGCATCATGAGC AGAGGTGTTTGAT CCGAATTATTAAA TTTCGGGGCGAGC CTCATTCGGGATCA GCGGCCGGGTATT GAAAGATATGGGA TATCAGCCAGACG CCTGGAAAGGATT TCGGCGGCGGTAC GGCATGCCGCCGA CCGTGCGGCGTGG TGCTGGCGATTATC CGCGTGCGGAGAT GTCAATGAGGCCG ATCGCGCTGATCG TGCTCAGCGCTTGG CATTTCGTCAGGA CGTGGGGAACGCT GGTTTCGCTCCCCA AGGCATCGCGGCC GCTGTGGGCGAAC AACGCGGCGGAAG GTTATTGCCGTGGC TACCGCTAAGTCTT AGCATCTGAAAGC GATCGCCTGCTGGT GTCGTAGCTGCTCG GCTGGCGCGTAAA TGGACGTCGATGC CAAAACGGAAAGA GGCGCAATCGAGA CATCACGCGGGTG AACTCCTGATTTTT TCGTTTCCGGCGCC CTGCTCATTAGCTC GTGTGAAATGTGG TCCCGCGGTATTCG GGTCCTGTTAGTGA TTCCAAAATCACC TCTGCTGACGGAA TGATAGTTGAAATT GTTAGCTGTATATA GAAGAAACCGGTC ATCAATAGCGCGA CTCACAGCATAAC TGCCGCTTATTGGC TTGAGGCGGTGGT TGTATATACACCCA CGCGTCGCGGCAG TGACCGTATCGGTC GGGGGC GTGAGCCGCTGCT CCGAGCATCATGA AGCGCAGCAGCAC GCTTTCGGGGCGA ATTGAAGGCCACT GCGAAAGATATGG ACCAGGTGGACCC GATCGGCGGCGGT GGCCATGTTTAAG ACTGCTGGCGATT CCGAACGCCGATT ATCATCGCGCTGAT TTCTGCTGCGTGTT CGCGTGGGGAACG AGCGGTATGTCGA CTGCTGTGGGCGA TGAAGGATATCGG ACTACCGCTAA TATTCTCGATGGCG ACCTGCTGGCTGTC CATAAAACGCAGG ATGTGCGCAATGG TCAGGTGGTTGTG GCGCGTATCGACG AAGAAGTGACCGT GAAGCGTCTGAAA AAACAGGGTAACG TCGTGGAATTGCTG CCGGAAAACAGCG AATTCTCGCCGATC GTGGTCGACCTTCG CGAACAAAGCTTT ACTATTGAAGGCC TGGCCGTCGGCGTT ATCCGCAACGGCA ACTGGCAATAA hisSCDS TAAGAAAAGCGGC 12 ... 22 ATGCATAACCAGG 32 CTGTACGAAGACG ATGAACGATTAT CTCCGATTCAACGT GCGTACGTAAAGA CTGCCGGGCGAAA AGAAAATCAAAAC CAGGCTGGATAAC CCGCTCTCTGGCAG GAATTTACGTTGG GACGATATGATCG CGCATTGAAGGCT GAATGTGCCGATT ATCAGCTGGAAGC CACTGAAGCAGGT GGCGATGGCGCCC GCGTATTCGCGCTA GCTTGGTAGCTAC CCATCGCCGTACA AAGCATCGATGCT GGTTACAGCGAAA GTCGATGACAAAC GGATGAGGCGCGT TCCGTTTGCCGATT ACGCGCACCACCG CGTATCGATATCCA GTAGAGCAGACCC ATGTGGCGGCGAC GCAGGTTGAAGCG CGTTATTCAAACGC GGTAAATCAAATT AAATAACGTGTTG GCTATCGGCGAAG AAAGCCCTCGAGC GGAAGCGATACGC TGACCGACGTGGT GCGTTGGCGCGGA TTCCCGTGTATGAT TGAAAAAGAGATG TATCGTGCGCGTTT TGAACCTGCGGGC TACACCTTTGAGG CGGTGCCGACGAT GCGAGGCGCCGGG ACCGTAACGGCGA GGATGCGGCGGAA GTTCATTTTTGTAT TAGCCTGACTCTAC GCGTTCAAACTTAT ATATAAAGAGAAT GTCCGGAAGGCAC CAAACAGCAGGTT AAACGTGGCAAAG GGCTGGCTGCGTA AACGTCCCGCTGG AACATTCAA CGCGCCGGTATCG TTGCCGATATCCAC AACATGGTCTCCTG TTCGATTACCGCAT TACAATCAAGAAC TGCGCTGAAGGTA AGCGCCTGTGGTA GCGGAATACGGCG CATTGGGCCGATG TTGATTGCCTGCGT TTCCGCCACGAAC ATTAACCCGGGCA GTCCGCAAAAAGG ATATCGGCAACGA CCGCTACCGTCAGT AGAGCGTATCCGC TCCACCAGATTGG ATGGTGGTGGACT CGCCGAAGCGTTT GCGCTCGCGATAA GGCCTGCAGGGGC AAATATTCCTATCC CGGATATCGATGC GTATCGGGGTAAA CGAGCTGATTATG CGCCGGTTCTCTGG CTGACCGCCCGCT AAAAAGATCTCCA GGTGGCGCGAGCT GGAAAAATACGGC GGGCATCTCCGGC GAACCGACTCCGC CACGTTGCGCTGG AGGCGCTGCTGGA AGCTGAACTCTATC ATCGGCAATGCGC GGTTCGCTGGAGG CATGTTGATCATCT CTCGCGCTAACTAT CGATCGTCTCAACT CGCGACGCGCTGG TCGATCAGTTTAAA TGGCCTATCTTGAG GTCAGCGTAAAAG CAGTTTAAAGATA CCTCCGATGTGTTC AGCTGGACGAAGA CTCGCGGTTGAATC CTGCAAACGCCGC CTATCGCCTGTTGG ATGTACACCAACC CGAAACAGATCGA CGCTGCGCGTGCT TCAGCCTCTGCACC GGATTCTAAAAAC TCGGGATCACCGA CCGGACGTCCAGG AGCGGGCGGCGCG CGCTGCTGAACGA CGCAGCGGCGCGG CGCCCCGACGCTG TGAAGTCCGCGAT GGCGACTATCTTG CGGCCTCGGCCTG ATGAAGAGTCCAA CTGCTGTCTGAAG AACGCATTTTGCCG GGATTGGCGATAC GGCTGTGCGCGCT GCTGCGCGTCTCTC GCTGGATGATGCC TGGCGGCGGATCC GGTATTCGCTATAC CGTTGAAGAGATC CGTGAATCAGCGT AAAGTGGGCTTCG CTGGTACGCGGTCT ATATTCTCAAGTCG CGACTACTACAAC CTGCGTATTCGCTC CGCACCGTGTTTGA TCGCGGGATCAAC GTGGGTCACCACC TTTATTGCCTGCCC AGCCTCGGTTCCCA GACCTGTTCACGTC GGGCACCGTCTGC AGGAGTTTGACGT GCCGGAGGCCGTT TATCGGTACCGTTA ACGATGGTCTGGTT ACGCGCTGGAGCA GAGCAGCTTGGCG GCGCCTGGAAGAT GTCGCGCTACCCCT ATCATTACGCCGAT GGCGTCGGCTTTGC GGATATTTCGATCA GATGGGGCTGGAA TTGGCTGCGTGGTA CGTCTTGTTTTACT AACGGTCCCGGCG GGTTCAGGCAGTG AGGCGCTGGTTTCC AATCCGGAATTTA ACCCTCGGCGTAA AAGCCGATCCTGTT CCGGCGGCAATAA GTCGATATATACCT GAAAAGCGGCCTG GGTAGCCTCCGGA TACGAAGACGGCG ACTGACACCCAGT TACGTAAAGACAG CCGCAGCAATGCG GCTGGATAACGAC TCTGGCTGAACAG GATATGATCGATC GTACGCGATGCGT AGCTGGAAGCGCG TACCCGGCGTTAA TATTCGCGCTAAA GCTGATGACCAAC GCATCGATGCTGG CATGGCGGCGGCA ATGAGGCGCGTCG ACTTTAAGAAGCA TATCGATATCCAGC GTTTGCGCGCGCTG AGGTTGAAGCGAA ATAAATGGGGCGC ATAA TCGCGTTGCGCTGG TGCTGGGCGAATC AGAAATCGCCGAC GGAAACGTGGTAG TGAAAGATTTACG CTCAGGTGAGCAA ACTACCGTAACGC AGGATAGCGTTGC TGCGCATTTGCGCA CACTTCTGGGTTAA
TABLE-US-00010 TableofStrains First Uni- Mutagenic SEQ Refer- Current versal DNA Gene1 ID Sort ence Name Name Lineage Description Genotype mutation NO: 1 Appli- CI006 CI006 Isolated None WT cation strain text from Enterobacter genera 2 Appli- CI008 CI008 Isolated None WT cation strain text from Burkholderia genera 3 Appli- CI010 CI010 Isolated None WT cation strain text from Klebsiella genera 4 Appli- CI019 CI019 Isolated None WT cation strain text from Rahnella genera 5 Appli- CI028 CI028 Isolated None WT cation strain text from Enterobacter genera 6 Appli- CI050 CI050 Isolated None WT cation strain text from Klebsiella genera 7 Appli- CM002 CM002 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGAGCCATATT 33 cation CI050 nifLgenewith KanR CAACGGGAAAC text akanamycin GTCTTGCTCCAG resistance GCCGCGATTAAA expression TTCCAACATGGA cassette TGCTGATTTATA (KanR) TGGGTATAAATG encodingthe GGCTCGCGATAA aminoglycoside TGTCGGGCAATC O-phosphotrans- AGGTGCGACAAT ferasegene CTATCGATTGTA aph1inserted. TGGGAAGCCCGA TGCGCCAGAGTT GTTTCTGAAACA TGGCAAAGGTAG CGTTGCCAATGA TGTTACAGATGA GATGGTCAGACT AAACTGGCTGAC GGAATTTATGCC TCTTCCGACCAT CAAGCATTTTAT CCGTACTCCTGA TGATGCATGGTT ACTCACCACTGC GATCCCCGGGAA AACAGCATTCCA GGTATTAGAAGA ATATCCTGATTC AGGTGAAAATAT TGTTGATGCGCT GGCAGTGTTCCT GCGCCGGTTGCA TTCGATTCCTGT TTGTAATTGTCC TTTTAACAGCGA TCGCGTATTTCG TCTCGCTCAGGC GCAATCACGAAT GAATAACGGTTT GGTTGATGCGAG TGATTTTGATGA CGAGCGTAATGG CTGGCCTGTTGA ACAAGTCTGGAA AGAAATGCATAA GCTTTTGCCATT CTCACCGGATTC AGTCGTCACTCA TGGTGATTTCTC ACTTGATAACCT TATTTTTGACGA GGGGAAATTAAT AGGTTGTATTGA TGTTGGACGAGT CGGAATCGCAGA CCGATACCAGGA TCTTGCCATCCT ATGGAACTGCCT CGGTGAGTTTTC TCCTTCATTACA GAAACGGCTTTT TCAAAAATATGG TATTGATAATCC TGATATGAATAA ATTGCAGTTTCA TTTGATGCTCGA TGAGTTTTTCTA ATAAGCCTGCCT GGTTCTGCGTTT CCCGCTCTTTAA TACCCTGACCGG AGGTGAGCAATG A 8 Appli- CM011 CM011 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGAGCATCACG 34 cation CI019 nifLgenewith SpecR GCGTTATCAGCA text aspectinomycin TCATTTCCTGAG resistance GGGAATATCGCC expression AGCCGCTTGTCG cassette CTGCAACATCCT (SpecR) TCACTGTTTTAT encodingthe ACCGTGGTTGAA streptomycin CAATCTTCGGTG 3-O- GCGAGCGTGTTG adenylyltrans- AGTCATCCTGAC ferasegene TAGCTGAGATGA aadAinserted. GGGCTCGCCCCC TCGTCCCGACAC TTCCAGATCGCC ATAGCGCACAGC GCCTCGAGCGGT GGTAACGGCGCA GTGGCGGTTTTC ATGGCTTGTTAT GACTGTTTTTTT GGGGTACAGTCT ATGCCTCGGGCA TCCAAGCAGCAA GCGCGTTACGCC GTGGGTCGATGT TTGATGTTATGG AGCAGCAACGAT GTTACGCAGCAG GGCAGTCGCCCT AAAACAAAGTTA AACATCATGAGG GAAGCGGTGATC GCCGAAGTATCG ACTCAACTATCA GAGGTAGTTGGC GTCATCGAGCGC CATCTCGAACCG ACGTTGCTGGCC GTACATTTGTAC GGCTCCGCAGTG GATGGCGGCCTG AAGCCACACAGT GATATTGATTTG CTGGTTACGGTG ACCGTAAGGCTT GATGAAACAAC GCGGCGAGCTTT GATCAACGACCT TTTGGAAACTTC GGCTTCCCCTGG AGAGAGCGAGA TTCTCCGCGCTG TAGAAGTCACCA TTGTTGTGCACG ACGACATCATTC CGTGGCGTTATC CAGCTAAGCGCG AACTGCAATTTG GAGAATGGCAG CGCAATGACATT CTTGCAGGTATC TTCGAGCCAGCC ACGATCGACATT GATCTGGCTATC TTGCTGACAAAA GCAAGAGAACA TAGCGTTGCCTT GGTAGGTCCAGC GGCGGAGGAAC TCTTTGATCCGG TTCCTGAACAGG ATCTATTTGAGG CGCTAAATGAAA CCTTAACGCTAT GGAACTCGCCGC CCGACTGGGCTG GCGATGAGCGA AATGTAGTGCTT ACGTTGTCCCGC ATTTGGTACAGC GCAGTAACCGGC AAAATCGCGCCG AAGGATGTCGCT GCCGACTGGGCA ATGGAGCGCCTG CCGGCCCAGTAT CAGCCCGTCATA CTTGAAGCTAGA CAGGCTTATCTT GGACAAGAAGA AGATCGCTTGGC CTCGCGCGCAGA TCAGTTGGAAGA ATTTGTCCACTA CGTGAAAGGCG AGATCACCAAGG TAGTCGGCAAAT AATGTCTAACAA TTCGTTCAAGCC GACGCCGCTTCG CGGCGCGGCTTA ACTCAAGCGTTA GATGCACTAAGC ACATAATTGCTC ACAGCCAAACTA TCAGGTCAAGTC TGCTTTTATTATT TTTAAGCGTGCA TAATAAGCCCTA CACAAATGGTAC CCGACCGGTGGT GAATTTAATCTC GCTGACGTGTAG ACATTCCCTTAT CCAGACGCTGAT CGCCCATCATCG CGGTTCTTTAGA TCTCTCGGTCCG CCCTGATGGCGG CACCTTGCTGAC GTTACGCCTGCC GGTACAGCAGGT TATCACCGGAGG CTTAAAATGA 9 Appli- CM013 CM013 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: CTGATCCTTCAA 35 cation CI006 nifLgenewith KanR CTCAGCAAAAGT text akanamycin TCGATTTATTCA resistance ACAAAGCCACGT expression TGTGTCTCAAAA cassette TCTCTGATGTTA (KanR) CATTGCACAAGA encodingthe TAAAAATATATC aminoglycoside ATCATGAACAAT O- AAAACTGTCTGC phosphotrans- TTACATAAACAG ferasegene TAATACAAGGGG aph1inserted. TGTTATGAGCCA TATTCAACGGGA AACGTCTTGCTC CAGGCCGCGATT AAATTCCAACAT GGATGCTGATTT ATATGGGTATAA ATGGGCTCGCGA TAATGTCGGGCA ATCAGGTGCGAC AATCTATCGATT GTATGGGAAGCC CGATGCGCCAGA GTTGTTTCTGAA ACATGGCAAAG GTAGCGTTGCCA ATGATGTTACAG ATGAGATGGTCA GACTAAACTGGC TGACGGAATTTA TGCCTCTTCCGA CCATCAAGCATT TTATCCGTACTC CTGATGATGCAT GGTTACTCACCA CTGCGATCCCCG GGAAAACAGCA TTCCAGGTATTA GAAGAATATCCT GATTCAGGTGAA AATATTGTTGAT GCGCTGGCAGTG TTCCTGCGCCGG TTGCATTCGATT CCTGTTTGTAAT TGTCCTTTTAAC AGCGATCGCGTA TTTCGTCTCGCT CAGGCGCAATCA CGAATGAATAAC GGTTTGGTTGAT GCGAGTGATTTT GATGACGAGCGT AATGGCTGGCCT GTTGAACAAGTC TGGAAAGAAAT GCATAAGCTTTT GCCATTCTCACC GGATTCAGTCGT CACTCATGGTGA TTTCTCACTTGA TAACCTTATTTTT GACGAGGGGAA ATTAATAGGTTG TATTGATGTTGG ACGAGTCGGAAT CGCAGACCGATA CCAGGATCTTGC CATCCTATGGAA CTGCCTCGGTGA GTTTTCTCCTTCA TTACAGAAACGG CTTTTTCAAAAA TATGGTATTGAT AATCCTGATATG AATAAATTGCAG TTTCATTTGATG CTCGATGAGTTT TTCTAATAAGCC TTGACCCTACGA TTCCCGCTATTT CATTCACTGACC GGAGGTTCAAAA TGA 10 FIG.4A CM004 CM004 Mutantof Disruptionof amtB:: ATGAAGATAGCA 36 CI010 amtBgene KanR ACAATGAAAAC witha AGGTCTGGGAGC kanamycin GTTGGCTCTTCT resistance TCCCTGATCCTT expression CAACTCAGCAAA cassette AGTTCGATTTAT (KanR) TCAACAAAGCCA encodingthe CGTTGTGTCTCA aminoglycoside AAATCTCTGATG O-phosphotrans- TTACATTGCACA ferasegene AGATAAAAATAT aph1inserted. ATCATCATGAAC AATAAAACTGTC TGCTTACATAAA CAGTAATACAAG GGGTGTTATGAG CCATATTCAACG GGAAACGTCTTG CTCCCGTCCGCG CTTAAACTCCAA CATGGACGCTGA TTTATATGGGTA TAAATGGGCTCG CGATAATGTCGG GCAATCAGGTGC GACAATCTATCG CTTGTATGGGAA GCCCGATGCGCC AGAGTTGTTTCT GAAACATGGCA AAGGTAGCGTTG CCAATGATGTTA CAGATGAGATGG TCCGTCTCAACT GGCTGACGGAGT TTATGCCTCTCC CGACCATCAAGC ATTTTATCCGTA CTCCTGATGATG CGTGGTTACTCA CCACCGCGATTC CTGGGAAAACA GCCTTCCAGGTA TTAGAAGAATAT CCTGATTCAGGT GAAAATATTGTT GATGCGCTGGCC GTGTTCCTGCGC CGGTTACATTCG ATTCCTGTTTGT AATTGTCCTTTT AACAGCGATCGT GTATTTCGTCTT GCTCAGGCGCAA TCACGCATGAAT AACGGTTTGGTT GATGCGAGTGAT TTTGATGACGAG CGTAATGGCTGG CCTGTTGAACAA GTCTGGAAAGAA ATGCACAAGCTC TTGCCATTCTCA CCGGATTCAGTC GTCACTCATGGT GATTTCTCACTT GATAACCTTATT TTTGACGAGGGG AAATTAATAGGT TGTATTGATGTT GGACGGGTCGG AATCGCAGACCG TTACCAGGACCT TGCCATTCTTTG GAACTGCCTCGG TGAGTTTTCTCC TTCATTACAGAA ACGGCTTTTTCA AAAATATGGTAT TGATAATCCTGA TATGAATAAATT GCAGTTTCATTT GATGCTCGATGA GTTTTTCTAATA AGCCTGTGAAGG GCTGGACGTAAA CAGCCACGGCGA AAACGCCTACAA CGCCTGA 11 FIG.4A CM005 CM005 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 37 CI010 nifLgenewith KanR ATGATGCTCGAT akanamycin AACGCCGTACCC resistance GAGGCGATTGCC expression GGCTGATCCTTC cassette AACTCAGCAAAA (KanR) GTTCGATTTATT encodingthe CAACAAAGCCAC aminoglycoside GTTGTGTCTCAA O- AATCTCTGATGT phosphotrans- TACATTGCACAA ferasegene GATAAAAATATA aph1inserted. TCATCATGAACA ATAAAACTGTCT GCTTACATAAAC AGTAATACAAGG GGTGTTATGAGC CATATTCAACGG GAAACGTCTTGC TCCCGTCCGCGC TTAAACTCCAAC ATGGACGCTGAT TTATATGGGTAT AAATGGGCTCGC GATAATGTCGGG CAATCAGGTGCG ACAATCTATCGC TTGTATGGGAAG CCCGATGCGCCA GAGTTGTTTCTG AAACATGGCAA AGGTAGCGTTGC CAATGATGTTAC AGATGAGATGGT CCGTCTCAACTG GCTGACGGAGTT TATGCCTCTCCC GACCATCAAGCA TTTTATCCGTAC TCCTGATGATGC GTGGTTACTCAC CACCGCGATTCC TGGGAAAACAG CCTTCCAGGTAT TAGAAGAATATC CTGATTCAGGTG AAAATATTGTTG ATGCGCTGGCCG TGTTCCTGCGCC GGTTACATTCGA TTCCTGTTTGTA ATTGTCCTTTTA ACAGCGATCGTG TATTTCGTCTTG CTCAGGCGCAAT CACGCATGAATA ACGGTTTGGTTG ATGCGAGTGATT TTGATGACGAGC GTAATGGCTGGC CTGTTGAACAAG TCTGGAAAGAAA TGCACAAGCTCT TGCCATTCTCAC CGGATTCAGTCG TCACTCATGGTG ATTTCTCACTTG ATAACCTTATTT TTGACGAGGGGA AATTAATAGGTT GTATTGATGTTG GACGGGTCGGA ATCGCAGACCGT TACCAGGACCTT GCCATTCTTTGG AACTGCCTCGGT GAGTTTTCTCCT TCATTACAGAAA CGGCTTTTTCAA AAATATGGTATT GATAATCCTGAT ATGAATAAATTG CAGTTTCATTTG ATGCTCGATGAG TTTTTCTAATAA GCCTTGGTTCTG CGTTTCCCGCTC TTTAATACCCTG ACCGGAGGTGA GCAATGA 12 FIG.4B CM015 CM015 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 38 CI006 nifLgenewith Prm5 ATGATGATGGAT afragmentof GCCGGCGGACAT theregion CATCGCGACAAA upstreamof CAATATTAATAC theompX CGGCAACCACAC geneinserted CGGCAATTTACG (Prm5). AGACTGCGCAGG CATCCTTTCTCC CGTCAATTTCTG TCAAATAAAGTA AAAGAGGCAGT CTACTTGAATTA CCCCCGGCTGGT TGAGCGTTTGTT GAAAAAAAGTA ACTGAAAAATCC GTAGAATAGCGC CACTCTGATGGT TCAATTAAGAAT TATCTGGATGAA TGTGCCATTAAA TGCGCAGCATAA TGGTGCGTTGTG CGGGAAAACTGC TTTTTTTTGAAA GGGTTGGTCAGT AGCGGAAACAA CTCACTTCACAC CCCGAAGGGGG AAGTTGCCTGAC CCTACGATTCCC GCTATTTCATTC ACTGACCGGAGG TTCAAAATGA 13 FIG.4B CM021 CM021 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 39 CI006 nifLgenewith Prm2 ATGATGATGGAT afragmentof GCCGGCTCACCA theregion CGGCGATAACCA upstreamofan TAGGTTTTCGGC unanotated GTGGCCACATCC geneandthe ATGGTGAATCCC first73bpof ACTTTTTCCAGC thatgene ACGCGCGCCACT inserted TCATCGGGTCTT (Prm2). AAATACATAGAT TTTCCTCGTCAT CTTTCCAAAGCC TCGCCACCTTAC ATGACTGAGCAT GGACCGTGACTC AGAAAATTCCAC AAACGAACCTGA AAGGCGTGATTG CCGTCTGGCCTT AAAAATTATGGT CTAAACTAAAAT TTACATCGAAAA CGAGGGAGGAT CCTATGTTTAAC AAACCGAATCGC CGTGACGTAGAT GAAGGTGTTGAG GATATTAACCAC GATGTTAACCAG CTCGAACTCACT TCACACCCCGAA GGGGGAAGTTGC CTGACCCTACGA TTCCCGCTATTT CATTCACTGACC GGAGGTTCAAAA TGA 14 FIG.4B CM023 CM023 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 40 CI006 nifLgenewith Prm4 ATGATGATGGAT afragmentof GCCGGCTGACGA theregion GGCAGGTTACAT upstreamof CACTGGTGAAAC theacpPgene CCTGCACGTCAA andthefirst TGGCGGAATGTA 121bpofthe TATGGTTTAACC acpPgene ACGATGAAAATT inserted ATTTGCGTTATT (Prm4). AGGGCGAAAGG CCTCAAAATAGC GTAAAATCGTGG TAAGAACTGCCG GGATTTAGTTGC AAATTTTTCAAC ATTTTATACACT ACGAAAACCATC GCGAAAGCGAG TTTTGATAGGAA ATTTAAGAGTAT GAGCACTATCGA AGAACGCGTTAA GAAAATTATCGG CGAACAGCTGGG CGTTAAGCAGGA AGAAGTTACCAA CAATGCTTCCTT CGTTGAAGACCT GGGCGCTGATTC TCTTGACACCGA ACTCACTTCACA CCCCGAAGGGG GAAGTTGCCTGA CCCTACGATTCC CGCTATTTCATT CACTGACCGGAG GTTCAAAATGA 15 FIG.10A CM014 CM014 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 41 CI006 nifLgenewith Prm1 ATGATGATGGAT afragmentof GCCGGCCGTCCT theregion GTAATAATAACC upstreamof GGACAATTCGGA thelppgene CTGATTAAAAAA andthefirst GCGCCCTTGTGG 29bpofthe CGCTTTTTTTATA lppgene TTCCCGCCTCCA inserted TTTAAAATAAAA (Prm1). AATCCAATCGGA TTTCACTATTTA AACTGGCCATTA TCTAAGATGAAT CCGATGGAAGCT CGCTGTTTTAAC ACGCGTTTTTTA ACCTTTTATTGA AAGTCGGTGCTT CTTTGAGCGAAC GATCAAATTTAA GTGGATTCCCAT CAAAAAAATATT CTCAACCTAAAA AAGTTTGTGTAA TACTTGTAACGC TACATGGAGATT AACTCAATCTAG AGGGTATTAATA ATGAATCGTACT AAACTGGTACTG GGCGCAACTCAC TTCACACCCCGA AGGGGGAAGTT GCCTGACCCTAC GATTCCCGCTAT TTCATTCACTGA CCGGAGGTTCAA AATGA 16 FIG.10A CM016 CM016 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 42 CI006 nifLgenewith Prm9 ATGATGATGGAT afragmentof GCCGGCATATTG theregion ACACCATGACGC upstreamof GCGTAATGCTGA thelexA3 TTGGTTCTGTGA geneandthe CGCTGGTAATGA first21bpof TTGTCGAAATTC thelexA3 TGAACAGTGCCA geneinserted TCGAAGCCGTAG (Prm9). TAGACCGTATTG GTGCAGAATTCC ATGAACTTTCCG GGCGGGCGAAG GATATGGGGTCG GCGGCGGTGCTG ATGTCCATCCTG CTGGCGATGTTT ACCTGGATCGCA TTACTCTGGTCA CATTTTCGATAA CGCTTCCAGAAT TCGATAACGCCC TGGTTTTTTGCTT AAATTTGGTTCC AAAATCGCCTTT AGCTGTATATAC TCACAGCATAAC TGTATATACACC CAGGGGGCGGG ATGAAAGCATTA ACGGCCAGGAA CTCACTTCACAC CCCGAAGGGGG AAGTTGCCTGAC CCTACGATTCCC GCTATTTCATTC ACTGACCGGAGG TTCAAAATGA 17 FIG.10A CM022 CM022 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 43 CI006 nifLgenewith Prm3 ATGATGATGGAT afragmentof GCCGGCATCATA theregion TTGCGCTCCCTG upstreamof GTTATCATTTGT themntP1 TACTAAATGAAA geneandthe TGTTATAATATA first53bpof ACAATTATAAAT themntP1 ACCACATCGCTT geneinserted TCAATTCACCAG (Prm3). CCAAATGAGAG GAGCGCCGTCTG ACATAGCCAGCG CTATAAAACATA GCATTATCTATA TGTTTATGATTA ATAACTGATTTT TGCGTTTTGGAT TTGGCTGTGGCA TCCTTGCCGCTC TTTTCGCAGCGT CTGCGTTTTTGC CCTCCGGTCAGG GCATTTAAGGGT CAGCAATGAGTT TTTACGCAATTA CGATTCTTGCCT TCGGCATGTCGA TGGATGCTTTAA CTCACTTCACAC CCCGAAGGGGG AAGTTGCCTGAC CCTACGATTCCC GCTATTTCATTC ACTGACCGGAGG TTCAAAATGA 18 FIG.10A CM024 CM024 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 44 CI006 nifLgenewith Prm7 ATGATGATGGAT afragmentof GCCGGCCGCGTC theregion AGGTTGAACGTA upstreamof AAAAAGTCGGTC thesspAgene TGCGCAAAGCAC inserted GTCGTCGTCCGC (Prm7). AGTTCTCCAAAC GTTAATTGGTTT CTGCTTCGGCAG AACGATTGGCGA AAAAACCCGGTG CGAACCGGGTTT TTTTATGGATAA AGATCGTGTTAT CCACAGCAATCC ATTGATTATCTC TTCTTTTTCAGC ATTTCCAGAATC CCCTCACCACAA AGCCCGCAAAAT CTGGTAAACTAT CATCCAATTTTC TGCCCAAATGGC TGGGATTGTTCA TTTTTTGTTTGCC TTACAACGAGAG TGACAGTACGCG CGGGTAGTTAAC TCAACATCTGAC CGGTCGATAACT CACTTCACACCC CGAAGGGGGAA GTTGCCTGACCC TACGATTCCCGC TATTTCATTCAC TGACCGGAGGTT CAAAATGA 19 FIG.10A CM025 CM025 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 45 CI006 nifLgenewith Prm10 ATGATGATGGAT afragmentof GCCGGCCCTGTA theregion TGAAGATGGCGT upstreamof GCGCAAAGATCG thehisSgene CCTGGATAACAG andthefirst CGATATGATTAG 52bpofthe CCAGCTTGAAGC hisSgene CCGCATTCGCGC inserted GAAAGCGTCAAT (Prm10). GCTGGACGAAGC GCGTCGTATCGA TGTGCAACAGGT AGAAAAATAAG GTTGCTGGGAAG CGGCAGGCTTCC CGTGTATGATGA ACCCGCCCGGCG CGACCCGTTGTT CGTCGCGGCCCC GAGGGTTCATTT TTTGTATTAATA AAGAGAATAAA CGTGGCAAAAA ATATTCAAGCCA TTCGCGGCATGA ACGATTATCTGC CTGGCGAACTCA CTTCACACCCCG AAGGGGGAAGT TGCCTGACCCTA CGATTCCCGCTA TTTCATTCACTG ACCGGAGGTTCA AAATGA 20 FIG.10B CM006 CM006 Mutantof Disruptionof glnB:: ATGAAAAAGATT 46 CI010 glnBgene KanR GATGCGATTATT witha AAACCTTTCAAA kanamycin CTGGATGACGTG resistance CGCTGATCCTTC expression AACTCAGCAAAA cassette GTTCGATTTATT (KanR) CAACAAAGCCAC encodingthe GTTGTGTCTCAA aminoglycoside AATCTCTGATGT O- TACATTGCACAA phosphotrans- GATAAAAATATA ferasegene TCATCATGAACA aph1inserted. ATAAAACTGTCT GCTTACATAAAC AGTAATACAAGG GGTGTTATGAGC CATATTCAACGG GAAACGTCTTGC TCCCGTCCGCGC TTAAACTCCAAC ATGGACGCTGAT TTATATGGGTAT AAATGGGCTCGC GATAATGTCGGG CAATCAGGTGCG ACAATCTATCGC TTGTATGGGAAG CCCGATGCGCCA GAGTTGTTTCTG AAACATGGCAA AGGTAGCGTTGC CAATGATGTTAC AGATGAGATGGT CCGTCTCAACTG GCTGACGGAGTT TATGCCTCTCCC GACCATCAAGCA TTTTATCCGTAC TCCTGATGATGC GTGGTTACTCAC CACCGCGATTCC TGGGAAAACAG CCTTCCAGGTAT TAGAAGAATATC CTGATTCAGGTG AAAATATTGTTG ATGCGCTGGCCG TGTTCCTGCGCC GGTTACATTCGA TTCCTGTTTGTA ATTGTCCTTTTA ACAGCGATCGTG TATTTCGTCTTG CTCAGGCGCAAT CACGCATGAATA ACGGTTTGGTTG ATGCGAGTGATT TTGATGACGAGC GTAATGGCTGGC CTGTTGAACAAG TCTGGAAAGAAA TGCACAAGCTCT TGCCATTCTCAC CGGATTCAGTCG TCACTCATGGTG ATTTCTCACTTG ATAACCTTATTT TTGACGAGGGGA AATTAATAGGTT GTATTGATGTTG GACGGGTCGGA ATCGCAGACCGT TACCAGGACCTT GCCATTCTTTGG AACTGCCTCGGT GAGTTTTCTCCT TCATTACAGAAA CGGCTTTTTCAA AAATATGGTATT GATAATCCTGAT ATGAATAAATTG CAGTTTCATTTG ATGCTCGATGAG TTTTTCTAATAA GCCTCGCGCGTG ATTCGTATCCGC ACCGGCGAAGA AGACGACGCGG CGATTTAA 21 FIG.10C CI028 CM017 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCATGAAC 47 nifL: CI028 nifLgenewith KanR CTGATGACGGAT KanR akanamycin GTCGTCTCAGCC resistance ACCGGGATCGCC expression GGGTTGCTTTCA cassette CGACAACACCCG (KanR) ACGCTGTTTTTT encodingthe ACACTAATTGAA aminoglycoside CAGGCCCCCGTG O- GCGATCACGCTG phosphotrans- ACGGATACCGCT ferasegene GCCCGCATTGTC aph1inserted. TATGCCAACCCG GGCGTGTTGAGT CATCCTGACTAG CTGAGATGAGGG CTCGCCTGATCC TTCAACTCAGCA AAAGTTCGATTT ATTCAACAAAGC CACGTTGTGTCT CAAAATCTCTGA TGTTACATTGCA CAAGATAAAAAT ATATCATCATGA ACAATAAAACTG TCTGCTTACATA AACAGTAATACA AGGGGTGTTATG AGCCATATTCAA CGGGAAACGTCT TGCTCCAGGCCG CGATTAAATTCC AACATGGATGCT GATTTATATGGG TATAAATGGGCT CGCGATAATGTC GGGCAATCAGGT GCGACAATCTAT CGATTGTATGGG AAGCCCGATGCG CCAGAGTTGTTT CTGAAACATGGC AAAGGTAGCGTT GCCAATGATGTT ACAGATGAGATG GTCAGACTAAAC TGGCTGACGGAA TTTATGCCTCTTC CGACCATCAAGC ATTTTATCCGTA CTCCTGATGATG CATGGTTACTCA CCACTGCGATCC CCGGGAAAACA GCATTCCAGGTA TTAGAAGAATAT CCTGATTCAGGT GAAAATATTGTT GATGCGCTGGCA GTGTTCCTGCGC CGGTTGCATTCG ATTCCTGTTTGT AATTGTCCTTTT AACAGCGATCGC GTATTTCGTCTC GCTCAGGCGCAA TCACGAATGAAT AACGGTTTGGTT GATGCGAGTGAT TTTGATGACGAG CGTAATGGCTGG CCTGTTGAACAA GTCTGGAAAGAA ATGCATAAGCTT TTGCCATTCTCA CCGGATTCAGTC GTCACTCATGGT GATTTCTCACTT GATAACCTTATT TTTGACGAGGGG AAATTAATAGGT TGTATTGATGTT GGACGAGTCGG AATCGCAGACCG ATACCAGGATCT TGCCATCCTATG GAACTGCCTCGG TGAGTTTTCTCC TTCATTACAGAA ACGGCTTTTTCA AAAATATGGTAT TGATAATCCTGA TATGAATAAATT GCAGTTTCATTT GATGCTCGATGA GTTTTTCTAATA AGCCTGACCGGT GGTGAATTTAAT CTCGCTGACGTG TAGACATTCATC GATCTGCATCCA CGGTCCGGCGGC GGTACCTGCCTG ACGCTACGTTTA CCGCTCTTTTAT GAACTGACCGGA GGCCCAAGATGA 22 FIG.10C CI019 CM011 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGAGCATCACG 48 nifL: CI019 nifLgenewith SpecR GCGTTATCAGCA SpeCR aspectinomycin TCATTTCCTGAG resistance GGGAATATCGCC expression AGCCGCTTGTCG cassette CTGCAACATCCT (SpecR) TCACTGTTTTAT encodingthe ACCGTGGTTGAA streptomycin CAATCTTCGGTG 3-O- GCGAGCGTGTTG adenylyltrans- AGTCATCCTGAC ferasegene TAGCTGAGATGA aadAinserted. GGGCTCGCCCCC TCGTCCCGACAC TTCCAGATCGCC ATAGCGCACAGC GCCTCGAGCGGT GGTAACGGCGCA GTGGCGGTTTTC ATGGCTTGTTAT GACTGTTTTTTT GGGGTACAGTCT ATGCCTCGGGCA TCCAAGCAGCAA GCGCGTTACGCC GTGGGTCGATGT TTGATGTTATGG AGCAGCAACGAT GTTACGCAGCAG GGCAGTCGCCCT AAAACAAAGTTA AACATCATGAGG GAAGCGGTGATC GCCGAAGTATCG ACTCAACTATCA GAGGTAGTTGGC GTCATCGAGCGC CATCTCGAACCG ACGTTGCTGGCC GTACATTTGTAC GGCTCCGCAGTG GATGGCGGCCTG AAGCCACACAGT GATATTGATTTG CTGGTTACGGTG ACCGTAAGGCTT GATGAAACAAC GCGGCGAGCTTT GATCAACGACCT TTTGGAAACTTC GGCTTCCCCTGG AGAGAGCGAGA TTCTCCGCGCTG TAGAAGTCACCA TTGTTGTGCACG ACGACATCATTC CGTGGCGTTATC CAGCTAAGCGCG AACTGCAATTTG GAGAATGGCAG CGCAATGACATT CTTGCAGGTATC TTCGAGCCAGCC ACGATCGACATT GATCTGGCTATC TTGCTGACAAAA GCAAGAGAACA TAGCGTTGCCTT GGTAGGTCCAGC GGCGGAGGAAC TCTTTGATCCGG TTCCTGAACAGG ATCTATTTGAGG CGCTAAATGAAA CCTTAACGCTAT GGAACTCGCCGC CCGACTGGGCTG GCGATGAGCGA AATGTAGTGCTT ACGTTGTCCCGC ATTTGGTACAGC GCAGTAACCGGC AAAATCGCGCCG AAGGATGTCGCT GCCGACTGGGCA ATGGAGCGCCTG CCGGCCCAGTAT CAGCCCGTCATA CTTGAAGCTAGA CAGGCTTATCTT GGACAAGAAGA AGATCGCTTGGC CTCGCGCGCAGA TCAGTTGGAAGA ATTTGTCCACTA CGTGAAAGGCG AGATCACCAAGG TAGTCGGCAAAT AATGTCTAACAA TTCGTTCAAGCC GACGCCGCTTCG CGGCGCGGCTTA ACTCAAGCGTTA GATGCACTAAGC ACATAATTGCTC ACAGCCAAACTA TCAGGTCAAGTC TGCTTTTATTATT TTTAAGCGTGCA TAATAAGCCCTA CACAAATGGTAC CCGACCGGTGGT GAATTTAATCTC GCTGACGTGTAG ACATTCCCTTAT CCAGACGCTGAT CGCCCATCATCG CGGTTCTTTAGA TCTCTCGGTCCG CCCTGATGGCGG CACCTTGCTGAC GTTACGCCTGCC GGTACAGCAGGT TATCACCGGAGG CTTAAAATGA 23 FIG.10C CI006 CM013 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: CTGATCCTTCAA 49 nifL: CI006 nifLgenewith KanR CTCAGCAAAAGT KanR akanamycin TCGATTTATTCA resistance ACAAAGCCACGT expression TGTGTCTCAAAA cassette TCTCTGATGTTA GCCGACTGGGCA ATGGAGCGCCTG CCGGCCCAGTAT CAGCCCGTCATA CTTGAAGCTAGA CAGGCTTATCTT GGACAAGAAGA AGATCGCTTGGC CTCGCGCGCAGA TCAGTTGGAAGA ATTTGTCCACTA CGTGAAAGGCG AGATCACCAAGG TAGTCGGCAAAT AATGTCTAACAA TTCGTTCAAGCC GACGCCGCTTCG CGGCGCGGCTTA ACTCAAGCGTTA GATGCACTAAGC ACATAATTGCTC ACAGCCAAACTA TCAGGTCAAGTC TGCTTTTATTATT TTTAAGCGTGCA TAATAAGCCCTA CACAAATGGTAC CCGACCGGTGGT GAATTTAATCTC GCTGACGTGTAG ACATTCCCTTAT CCAGACGCTGAT CGCCCATCATCG CGGTTCTTTAGA TCTCTCGGTCCG CCCTGATGGCGG CACCTTGCTGAC GTTACGCCTGCC GGTACAGCAGGT TATCACCGGAGG CTTAAAATGA 23 FIG.10C CI006 CM013 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: CTGATCCTTCAA 49 nifL: CI006 nifLgenewith KanR CTCAGCAAAAGT KanR akanamycin TCGATTTATTCA resistance ACAAAGCCACGT expression TGTGTCTCAAAA cassette TCTCTGATGTTA (KanR) CATTGCACAAGA encodingthe TAAAAATATATC aminoglycoside ATCATGAACAAT O- AAAACTGTCTGC phosphotrans- TTACATAAACAG ferasegene TAATACAAGGGG aph1inserted. TGTTATGAGCCA TATTCAACGGGA AACGTCTTGCTC CAGGCCGCGATT AAATTCCAACAT GGATGCTGATTT ATATGGGTATAA ATGGGCTCGCGA TAATGTCGGGCA ATCAGGTGCGAC AATCTATCGATT GTATGGGAAGCC CGATGCGCCAGA GTTGTTTCTGAA ACATGGCAAAG GTAGCGTTGCCA ATGATGTTACAG ATGAGATGGTCA GACTAAACTGGC TGACGGAATTTA TGCCTCTTCCGA CCATCAAGCATT TTATCCGTACTC CTGATGATGCAT GGTTACTCACCA CTGCGATCCCCG GGAAAACAGCA TTCCAGGTATTA GAAGAATATCCT GATTCAGGTGAA AATATTGTTGAT GCGCTGGCAGTG TTCCTGCGCCGG TTGCATTCGATT CCTGTTTGTAAT TGTCCTTTTAAC AGCGATCGCGTA TTTCGTCTCGCT CAGGCGCAATCA CGAATGAATAAC GCGAGTGATTTT GATGACGAGCGT AATGGCTGGCCT GTTGAACAAGTC TGGAAAGAAAT GCATAAGCTTTT GCCATTCTCACC GGATTCAGTCGT CACTCATGGTGA TTTCTCACTTGA TAACCTTATTTTT GACGAGGGGAA ATTAATAGGTTG TATTGATGTTGG ACGAGTCGGAAT CGCAGACCGATA CCAGGATCTTGC CATCCTATGGAA CTGCCTCGGTGA GTTTTCTCCTTCA TTACAGAAACGG CTTTTTCAAAAA TATGGTATTGAT AATCCTGATATG AATAAATTGCAG TTTCATTTGATG CTCGATGAGTTT TTCTAATAAGCC TTGACCCTACGA TTCCCGCTATTT CATTCACTGACC GGAGGTTCAAAA TGA 24 FIG.10C CI010 CM005 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 50 nifL: CI010 nifLgenewith KanR ATGATGCTCGAT KanR akanamycin AACGCCGTACCC resistance GAGGCGATTGCC expression GGCTGATCCTTC cassette AACTCAGCAAAA (KanR) GTTCGATTTATT encodingthe CAACAAAGCCAC aminoglycoside GTTGTGTCTCAA O- AATCTCTGATGT phosphotrans- TACATTGCACAA ferasegene GATAAAAATATA aphlinserted. TCATCATGAACA ATAAAACTGTCT GCTTACATAAAC AGTAATACAAGG GGTGTTATGAGC CATATTCAACGG GAAACGTCTTGC TCCCGTCCGCGC TTAAACTCCAAC ATGGACGCTGAT TTATATGGGTAT AAATGGGCTCGC GATAATGTCGGG CAATCAGGTGCG ACAATCTATCGC TTGTATGGGAAG CCCGATGCGCCA GAGTTGTTTCTG AAACATGGCAA AGGTAGCGTTGC CAATGATGTTAC AGATGAGATGGT CCGTCTCAACTG GCTGACGGAGTT TATGCCTCTCCC GACCATCAAGCA TTTTATCCGTAC TCCTGATGATGC GTGGTTACTCAC CACCGCGATTCC TGGGAAAACAG CCTTCCAGGTAT TAGAAGAATATC CTGATTCAGGTG AAAATATTGTTG ATGCGCTGGCCG TGTTCCTGCGCC GGTTACATTCGA TTCCTGTTTGTA ATTGTCCTTTTA ACAGCGATCGTG TATTTCGTCTTG CTCAGGCGCAAT CACGCATGAATA ACGGTTTGGTTG ATGCGAGTGATT TTGATGACGAGC GTAATGGCTGGC CTGTTGAACAAG 25 FIG.4C Strain2 CI006 Isolated None WT strain from Enterobacter genera 26 FIG.4C Strain4 CI010 Isolated None WT strain from Klebsiella genera 27 FIG.4C Strain1 CI019 Isolated None WT strain from Rahnella genera 28 FIG.4C Strain3 CI028 Isolated None WT strain from Enterobacter genera 29 FIG.4B Strain2 CI006 Isolated None WT strain from Enterobacter genera 30 FIG.4B High CM014 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 51 CI006 nifLgenewith Prm1 ATGATGATGGAT afragmentof GCCGGCCGTCCT theregion GTAATAATAACC upstreamof GGACAATTCGGA thelppgene CTGATTAAAAAA andthefirst GCGCCCTTGTGG 29bpofthe CGCTTTTTTTATA lppgene TTCCCGCCTCCA inserted TTTAAAATAAAA (Prm1). AATCCAATCGGA TTTCACTATTTA AACTGGCCATTA TCTAAGATGAAT CCGATGGAAGCT CGCTGTTTTAAC ACGCGTTTTTTA ACCTTTTATTGA AAGTCGGTGCTT CTTTGAGCGAAC GATCAAATTTAA GTGGATTCCCAT CAAAAAAATATT CTCAACCTAAAA AAGTTTGTGTAA TACTTGTAACGC TACATGGAGATT AACTCAATCTAG AGGGTATTAATA ATGAATCGTACT AAACTGGTACTG GGCGCAACTCAC TTCACACCCCGA AGGGGGAAGTT GCCTGACCCTAC GATTCCCGCTAT TTCATTCACTGA CCGGAGGTTCAA AATGA 31 FIG.4B Med CM015 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 52 CI006 nifLgenewith Prm5 ATGATGATGGAT afragmentof GCCGGCGGACAT theregion CATCGCGACAAA upstreamof CAATATTAATAC theompX CGGCAACCACAC geneinserted CGGCAATTTACG (Prm5). AGACTGCGCAGG CATCCTTTCTCC CGTCAATTTCTG TCAAATAAAGTA AAAGAGGCAGT CTACTTGAATTA CCCCCGGCTGGT TGAGCGTTTGTT GAAAAAAAGTA ACTGAAAAATCC GTAGAATAGCGC CACTCTGATGGT TAATTAACCTAT TCAATTAAGAAT TATCTGGATGAA TGTGCCATTAAA TGCGCAGCATAA TGGTGCGTTGTG CGGGAAAACTGC TTTTTTTTGAAA GGGTTGGTCAGT AGCGGAAACAA CTCACTTCACAC CCCGAAGGGGG AAGTTGCCTGAC CCTACGATTCCC GCTATTTCATTC ACTGACCGGAGG TTCAAAATGA 32 FIG.4B Low CM023 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 53 CI006 nifLgenewith Prm4 ATGATGATGGAT afragmentof GCCGGCTGACGA theregion GGCAGGTTACAT upstreamof CACTGGTGAAAC theacpPgene CCTGCACGTCAA andthefirst TGGCGGAATGTA 121bpofthe TATGGTTTAACC acpPgene ACGATGAAAATT inserted ATTTGCGTTATT (Prm4). AGGGCGAAAGG CCTCAAAATAGC GTAAAATCGTGG TAAGAACTGCCG GGATTTAGTTGC AAATTTTTCAAC ATTTTATACACT ACGAAAACCATC GCGAAAGCGAG TTTTGATAGGAA ATTTAAGAGTAT GAGCACTATCGA AGAACGCGTTAA GAAAATTATCGG CGAACAGCTGGG CGTTAAGCAGGA AGAAGTTACCAA CAATGCTTCCTT CGTTGAAGACCT GGGCGCTGATTC TCTTGACACCGA ACTCACTTCACA CCCCGAAGGGG GAAGTTGCCTGA CCCTACGATTCC CGCTATTTCATT CACTGACCGGAG GTTCAAAATGA 33 FIG.4D Strain2 CI006 Isolated None WT strain from Enterobacter genera 34 FIG.4D Evolved CM029 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 54 CI006 nifLgenewith Prm5 ATGATGATGGAT afragmentof AglnE- GCCGGCGGACAT theregion ARKO1 CATCGCGACAAA upstreamof CAATATTAATAC theompX CGGCAACCACAC geneinserted CGGCAATTTACG (Prm5)and AGACTGCGCAGG deletionofthe CATCCTTTCTCC 1287bpafter CGTCAATTTCTG thestartcodon TCAAATAAAGTA oftheglnE AAAGAGGCAGT gene CTACTTGAATTA containingthe CCCCCGGCTGGT adenylyl- TGAGCGTTTGTT removing GAAAAAAAGTA domainof ACTGAAAAATCC glutamate- GTAGAATAGCGC ammonia- CACTCTGATGGT ligase TAATTAACCTAT adenylyltrans- TCAATTAAGAAT ferase TATCTGGATGAA (AglnE- TGTGCCATTAAA ARKO1). TGCGCAGCATAA TGGTGCGTTGTG CGGGAAAACTGC TTTTTTTTGAAA GGGTTGGTCAGT AGCGGAAACAA CTCACTTCACAC CCCGAAGGGGG AAGTTGCCTGAC CCTACGATTCCC GCTATTTCATTC ACTGACCGGAGG TTCAAAATGA 35 FIG.14C Wild CI006 Isolated None WT strain from Enterobacter genera 36 FIG.14C Evolved CM014 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGACCCTGAAT 55 CI006 nifLgenewith Prm1 ATGATGATGGAT afragmentof GCCGGCCGTCCT theregion GTAATAATAACC upstreamof GGACAATTCGGA thelppgene CTGATTAAAAAA andthefirst GCGCCCTTGTGG 29bpofthe CGCTTTTTTTATA lppgene TTCCCGCCTCCA inserted TTTAAAATAAAA (Prm1). AATCCAATCGGA TTTCACTATTTA AACTGGCCATTA TCTAAGATGAAT CCGATGGAAGCT CGCTGTTTTAAC ACGCGTTTTTTA ACCTTTTATTGA AAGTCGGTGCTT CTTTGAGCGAAC GATCAAATTTAA GTGGATTCCCAT CAAAAAAATATT CTCAACCTAAAA AAGTTTGTGTAA TACTTGTAACGC TACATGGAGATT AACTCAATCTAG AGGGTATTAATA ATGAATCGTACT AAACTGGTACTG GGCGCAACTCAC TTCACACCCCGA AGGGGGAAGTT GCCTGACCCTAC GATTCCCGCTAT TTCATTCACTGA CCGGAGGTTCAA AATGA 37 FIG.14B Wild CI019 Isolated None WT strain from Rahnella genera 38 FIG.14B Evolved CM011 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGAGCATCACG 56 CI019 nifLgenewith SpecR GCGTTATCAGCA aspectinomycin TCATTTCCTGAG resistance GGGAATATCGCC expression AGCCGCTTGTCG cassette CTGCAACATCCT (SpecR) TCACTGTTTTAT encodingthe ACCGTGGTTGAA streptomycin CAATCTTCGGTG 3-O- GCGAGCGTGTTG adenylyltransf AGTCATCCTGAC erasegene TAGCTGAGATGA aadAinserted. GGGCTCGCCCCC TCGTCCCGACAC TTCCAGATCGCC ATAGCGCACAGC GCCTCGAGCGGT GGTAACGGCGCA GTGGCGGTTTTC ATGGCTTGTTAT GACTGTTTTTTT GGGGTACAGTCT ATGCCTCGGGCA TCCAAGCAGCAA GCGCGTTACGCC GTGGGTCGATGT TTGATGTTATGG AGCAGCAACGAT GTTACGCAGCAG GGCAGTCGCCCT AAAACAAAGTTA AACATCATGAGG GAAGCGGTGATC GCCGAAGTATCG ACTCAACTATCA GAGGTAGTTGGC GTCATCGAGCGC CATCTCGAACCG ACGTTGCTGGCC GTACATTTGTAC GGCTCCGCAGTG GATGGCGGCCTG AAGCCACACAGT GATATTGATTTG CTGGTTACGGTG ACCGTAAGGCTT GATGAAACAAC GCGGCGAGCTTT GATCAACGACCT TTTGGAAACTTC GGCTTCCCCTGG AGAGAGCGAGA TTCTCCGCGCTG TAGAAGTCACCA TTGTTGTGCACG ACGACATCATTC CGTGGCGTTATC CAGCTAAGCGCG AACTGCAATTTG GAGAATGGCAG CGCAATGACATT CTTGCAGGTATC TTCGAGCCAGCC ACGATCGACATT GATCTGGCTATC TTGCTGACAAAA GCAAGAGAACA TAGCGTTGCCTT GGTAGGTCCAGC GGCGGAGGAAC TCTTTGATCCGG TTCCTGAACAGG ATCTATTTGAGG CGCTAAATGAAA CCTTAACGCTAT GGAACTCGCCGC CCGACTGGGCTG GCGATGAGCGA AATGTAGTGCTT ACGTTGTCCCGC ATTTGGTACAGC GCAGTAACCGGC AAAATCGCGCCG AAGGATGTCGCT GCCGACTGGGCA ATGGAGCGCCTG CCGGCCCAGTAT CAGCCCGTCATA CTTGAAGCTAGA CAGGCTTATCTT GGACAAGAAGA AGATCGCTTGGC CTCGCGCGCAGA TCAGTTGGAAGA ATTTGTCCACTA CGTGAAAGGCG AGATCACCAAGG TAGTCGGCAAAT AATGTCTAACAA TTCGTTCAAGCC GACGCCGCTTCG CGGCGCGGCTTA ACTCAAGCGTTA GATGCACTAAGC ACATAATTGCTC ACAGCCAAACTA TCAGGTCAAGTC TGCTTTTATTATT TTTAAGCGTGCA TAATAAGCCCTA CACAAATGGTAC CCGACCGGTGGT GAATTTAATCTC GCTGACGTGTAG ACATTCCCTTAT CCAGACGCTGAT CGCCCATCATCG CGGTTCTTTAGA TCTCTCGGTCCG CCCTGATGGCGG CACCTTGCTGAC GTTACGCCTGCC GGTACAGCAGGT TATCACCGGAGG CTTAAAATGA 39 FIG.14A Evolved CM011 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGAGCATCACG 57 CI019 nifLgenewith SpecR GCGTTATCAGCA aspectinomycin TCATTTCCTGAG resistance GGGAATATCGCC expression AGCCGCTTGTCG cassette CTGCAACATCCT (SpecR) TCACTGTTTTAT encodingthe ACCGTGGTTGAA streptomycin CAATCTTCGGTG 3-O- GCGAGCGTGTTG adenylyltransf- AGTCATCCTGAC erasegene TAGCTGAGATGA aadAinserted. GGGCTCGCCCCC TCGTCCCGACAC TTCCAGATCGCC ATAGCGCACAGC GCCTCGAGCGGT GGTAACGGCGCA GTGGCGGTTTTC ATGGCTTGTTAT GACTGTTTTTTT GGGGTACAGTCT ATGCCTCGGGCA TCCAAGCAGCAA GCGCGTTACGCC GTGGGTCGATGT TTGATGTTATGG AGCAGCAACGAT GTTACGCAGCAG GGCAGTCGCCCT AAAACAAAGTTA AACATCATGAGG GAAGCGGTGATC GCCGAAGTATCG ACTCAACTATCA GAGGTAGTTGGC GTCATCGAGCGC CATCTCGAACCG ACGTTGCTGGCC GTACATTTGTAC GGCTCCGCAGTG GATGGCGGCCTG AAGCCACACAGT GATATTGATTTG CTGGTTACGGTG ACCGTAAGGCTT GATGAAACAAC GCGGCGAGCTTT GATCAACGACCT TTTGGAAACTTC GGCTTCCCCTGG AGAGAGCGAGA TTCTCCGCGCTG TAGAAGTCACCA TTGTTGTGCACG ACGACATCATTC CGTGGCGTTATC CAGCTAAGCGCG AACTGCAATTTG GAGAATGGCAG CGCAATGACATT CTTGCAGGTATC TTCGAGCCAGCC ACGATCGACATT GATCTGGCTATC TTGCTGACAAAA GCAAGAGAACA TAGCGTTGCCTT GGTAGGTCCAGC GGCGGAGGAAC TCTTTGATCCGG TTCCTGAACAGG ATCTATTTGAGG CGCTAAATGAAA CCTTAACGCTAT GGAACTCGCCGC CCGACTGGGCTG GCGATGAGCGA AATGTAGTGCTT ACGTTGTCCCGC ATTTGGTACAGC GCAGTAACCGGC AAAATCGCGCCG AAGGATGTCGCT GCCGACTGGGCA ATGGAGCGCCTG CCGGCCCAGTAT CAGCCCGTCATA CTTGAAGCTAGA CAGGCTTATCTT GGACAAGAAGA AGATCGCTTGGC CTCGCGCGCAGA TCAGTTGGAAGA ATTTGTCCACTA CGTGAAAGGCG AGATCACCAAGG TAGTCGGCAAAT AATGTCTAACAA TTCGTTCAAGCC GACGCCGCTTCG CGGCGCGGCTTA ACTCAAGCGTTA GATGCACTAAGC ACATAATTGCTC ACAGCCAAACTA TCAGGTCAAGTC TGCTTTTATTATT TTTAAGCGTGCA TAATAAGCCCTA CACAAATGGTAC CCGACCGGTGGT GAATTTAATCTC GCTGACGTGTAG ACATTCCCTTAT CCAGACGCTGAT CGCCCATCATCG CGGTTCTTTAGA TCTCTCGGTCCG CCCTGATGGCGG CACCTTGCTGAC GTTACGCCTGCC GGTACAGCAGGT TATCACCGGAGG CTTAAAATGA 40 FIG.15A Wild CI006 Isolated None WT strain from Enterobacter genera 41 FIG.15A Evolved CM013 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: CTGATCCTTCAA 58 CI006 nifLgenewith KanR CTCAGCAAAAGT akanamycin TCGATTTATTCA resistance ACAAAGCCACGT expression TGTGTCTCAAAA cassette TCTCTGATGTTA (KanR) CATTGCACAAGA encodingthe TAAAAATATATC aminoglycoside ATCATGAACAAT O- AAAACTGTCTGC phosphotrans- TTACATAAACAG ferasegene TAATACAAGGGG aph1inserted. TGTTATGAGCCA TATTCAACGGGA AACGTCTTGCTC CAGGCCGCGATT AAATTCCAACAT GGATGCTGATTT ATATGGGTATAA ATGGGCTCGCGA TAATGTCGGGCA ATCAGGTGCGAC AATCTATCGATT GTATGGGAAGCC CGATGCGCCAGA GTTGTTTCTGAA ACATGGCAAAG GTAGCGTTGCCA ATGATGTTACAG ATGAGATGGTCA GACTAAACTGGC TGACGGAATTTA TGCCTCTTCCGA CCATCAAGCATT TTATCCGTACTC CTGATGATGCAT GGTTACTCACCA CTGCGATCCCCG GGAAAACAGCA TTCCAGGTATTA GAAGAATATCCT GATTCAGGTGAA AATATTGTTGAT GCGCTGGCAGTG TTCCTGCGCCGG TTGCATTCGATT CCTGTTTGTAAT TGTCCTTTTAAC AGCGATCGCGTA TTTCGTCTCGCT CAGGCGCAATCA CGAATGAATAAC GGTTTGGTTGAT GCGAGTGATTTT GATGACGAGCGT AATGGCTGGCCT GTTGAACAAGTC TGGAAAGAAAT GCATAAGCTTTT GCCATTCTCACC GGATTCAGTCGT CACTCATGGTGA TTTCTCACTTGA TAACCTTATTTTT GACGAGGGGAA ATTAATAGGTTG TATTGATGTTGG ACGAGTCGGAAT CGCAGACCGATA CCAGGATCTTGC CATCCTATGGAA CTGCCTCGGTGA GTTTTCTCCTTCA TTACAGAAACGG CTTTTTCAAAAA TATGGTATTGAT AATCCTGATATG AATAAATTGCAG TTTCATTTGATG CTCGATGAGTTT TTCTAATAAGCC TTGACCCTACGA TTCCCGCTATTT CATTCACTGACC GGAGGTTCAAAA TGA 42 FIG.15B Noname CM011 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGAGCATCACG 59 CI019 nifLgenewith SpecR GCGTTATCAGCA aspectinomycin TCATTTCCTGAG resistance GGGAATATCGCC expression AGCCGCTTGTCG cassette CTGCAACATCCT (SpecR) TCACTGTTTTAT encodingthe ACCGTGGTTGAA streptomycin CAATCTTCGGTG 3-O- GCGAGCGTGTTG Adenylyltrans- AGTCATCCTGAC ferasegene TAGCTGAGATGA aadAinserted. GGGCTCGCCCCC TCGTCCCGACAC TTCCAGATCGCC ATAGCGCACAGC GCCTCGAGCGGT GGTAACGGCGCA GTGGCGGTTTTC ATGGCTTGTTAT GACTGTTTTTTT GGGGTACAGTCT ATGCCTCGGGCA TCCAAGCAGCAA GCGCGTTACGCC GTGGGTCGATGT TTGATGTTATGG AGCAGCAACGAT GTTACGCAGCAG GGCAGTCGCCCT AAAACAAAGTTA AACATCATGAGG GAAGCGGTGATC GCCGAAGTATCG ACTCAACTATCA GAGGTAGTTGGC GTCATCGAGCGC CATCTCGAACCG ACGTTGCTGGCC GTACATTTGTAC GGCTCCGCAGTG GATGGCGGCCTG AAGCCACACAGT GATATTGATTTG CTGGTTACGGTG ACCGTAAGGCTT GATGAAACAAC GCGGCGAGCTTT GATCAACGACCT TTTGGAAACTTC GGCTTCCCCTGG AGAGAGCGAGA TTCTCCGCGCTG TAGAAGTCACCA TTGTTGTGCACG ACGACATCATTC CGTGGCGTTATC CAGCTAAGCGCG AACTGCAATTTG GAGAATGGCAG CGCAATGACATT CTTGCAGGTATC TTCGAGCCAGCC ACGATCGACATT GATCTGGCTATC TTGCTGACAAAA GCAAGAGAACA TAGCGTTGCCTT GGTAGGTCCAGC GGCGGAGGAAC TCTTTGATCCGG TTCCTGAACAGG ATCTATTTGAGG CGCTAAATGAAA CCTTAACGCTAT GGAACTCGCCGC CCGACTGGGCTG GCGATGAGCGA AATGTAGTGCTT ACGTTGTCCCGC ATTTGGTACAGC GCAGTAACCGGC AAAATCGCGCCG AAGGATGTCGCT GCCGACTGGGCA ATGGAGCGCCTG CCGGCCCAGTAT CAGCCCGTCATA CTTGAAGCTAGA CAGGCTTATCTT GGACAAGAAGA AGATCGCTTGGC CTCGCGCGCAGA TCAGTTGGAAGA ATTTGTCCACTA CGTGAAAGGCG AGATCACCAAGG TAGTCGGCAAAT AATGTCTAACAA TTCGTTCAAGCC GACGCCGCTTCG CGGCGCGGCTTA ACTCAAGCGTTA GATGCACTAAGC ACATAATTGCTC ACAGCCAAACTA TCAGGTCAAGTC TGCTTTTATTATT TTTAAGCGTGCA TAATAAGCCCTA CACAAATGGTAC CCGACCGGTGGT GAATTTAATCTC GCTGACGTGTAG ACATTCCCTTAT CCAGACGCTGAT CGCCCATCATCG CGGTTCTTTAGA TCTCTCGGTCCG CCCTGATGGCGG CACCTTGCTGAC GTTACGCCTGCC GGTACAGCAGGT TATCACCGGAGG CTTAAAATGA 43 FIG.16B Strain5 CI008 Isolated None WT strain from Burkholderia genera 44 FIG.16B Strain1 CM011 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGAGCATCACG 60 CI019 nifLgenewith SpecR GCGTTATCAGCA a TCATTTCCTGAG spectinomycin GGGAATATCGCC resistance AGCCGCTTGTCG expression CTGCAACATCCT cassette TCACTGTTTTAT (SpecR) ACCGTGGTTGAA encodingthe CAATCTTCGGTG streptomycin GCGAGCGTGTTG 3-O- AGTCATCCTGAC adenylyltrans- TAGCTGAGATGA ferasegene GGGCTCGCCCCC aadAinserted. TCGTCCCGACAC TTCCAGATCGCC ATAGCGCACAGC GCCTCGAGCGGT GGTAACGGCGCA GTGGCGGTTTTC ATGGCTTGTTAT GACTGTTTTTTT GGGGTACAGTCT ATGCCTCGGGCA TCCAAGCAGCAA GCGCGTTACGCC GTGGGTCGATGT TTGATGTTATGG AGCAGCAACGAT GTTACGCAGCAG GGCAGTCGCCCT AAAACAAAGTTA AACATCATGAGG GAAGCGGTGATC GCCGAAGTATCG ACTCAACTATCA GAGGTAGTTGGC GTCATCGAGCGC CATCTCGAACCG ACGTTGCTGGCC GTACATTTGTAC GGCTCCGCAGTG GATGGCGGCCTG AAGCCACACAGT GATATTGATTTG CTGGTTACGGTG ACCGTAAGGCTT GATGAAACAAC GCGGCGAGCTTT GATCAACGACCT TTTGGAAACTTC GGCTTCCCCTGG AGAGAGCGAGA TTCTCCGCGCTG TAGAAGTCACCA TTGTTGTGCACG ACGACATCATTC CGTGGCGTTATC CAGCTAAGCGCG AACTGCAATTTG GAGAATGGCAG CGCAATGACATT CTTGCAGGTATC TTCGAGCCAGCC ACGATCGACATT GATCTGGCTATC TTGCTGACAAAA GCAAGAGAACA TAGCGTTGCCTT GGTAGGTCCAGC GGCGGAGGAAC TCTTTGATCCGG TTCCTGAACAGG ATCTATTTGAGG CGCTAAATGAAA CCTTAACGCTAT GGAACTCGCCGC CCGACTGGGCTG GCGATGAGCGA AATGTAGTGCTT ACGTTGTCCCGC ATTTGGTACAGC GCAGTAACCGGC AAAATCGCGCCG AAGGATGTCGCT GCCGACTGGGCA ATGGAGCGCCTG CCGGCCCAGTAT CAGCCCGTCATA CTTGAAGCTAGA CAGGCTTATCTT GGACAAGAAGA AGATCGCTTGGC CTCGCGCGCAGA TCAGTTGGAAGA ATTTGTCCACTA CGTGAAAGGCG AGATCACCAAGG TAGTCGGCAAAT AATGTCTAACAA TTCGTTCAAGCC GACGCCGCTTCG CGGCGCGGCTTA ACTCAAGCGTTA GATGCACTAAGC ACATAATTGCTC ACAGCCAAACTA TCAGGTCAAGTC TGCTTTTATTATT TTTAAGCGTGCA TAATAAGCCCTA CACAAATGGTAC CCGACCGGTGGT GAATTTAATCTC GCTGACGTGTAG ACATTCCCTTAT CCAGACGCTGAT CGCCCATCATCG CGGTTCTTTAGA TCTCTCGGTCCG CCCTGATGGCGG CACCTTGCTGAC GTTACGCCTGCC GGTACAGCAGGT TATCACCGGAGG CTTAAAATGA First Uni- Mutagenic SEQ Refer- Current versal DNA Gene2 ID Sort ence Name Name Lineage Description Genotype mutation NO: 34 FIG.4D Evolved CM029 Mutantof Disruptionof nifL:: ATGTTTAACGAT 61 CI006 nifLgene Prm5 CTGATTGGCGAT witha AglnE- GATGAAACGGA fragmentof ARKO1 TTCGCCGGAAGA theregion TGCGCTTTCTGA upstreamof GAGCTGGCGCG theompX AATTGTGGCAGG geneinserted ATGCGTTGCAGG (Prm5)and AGGAGGATTCC deletionofthe ACGCCCGTGCTG 1287bpafter GCGCATCTCTCA thestart GAGGACGATCG codonofthe CCGCCGCGTGGT glnEgene GGCGCTGATTGC containingthe CGATTTTCGCAA adenylyl- AGAGTTGGATA removing AACGCACCATTG domainof GCCCGCGAGGG glutamate- CGGCAGGTACTC ammonia- GATCACTTAATG ligase CCGCATCTGCTC adenylyltrans- AGCGATGTATGC ferase TCGCGCGACGAT (AglnE- GCGCCAGTACCG ARKO1). CTGTCACGCCTG ACGCCGCTGCTC ACCGGAATTATT ACCCGCACCACT TACCTTGAGCTG CTAAGTGAATTT CCCGGCGCACTG AAACACCTCATT TCCCTGTGTGCC GCGTCGCCGATG GTTGCCAGTCAG CTGGCGCGCTAC CCGATCCTGCTT GATGAATTGCTC GACCCGAATAC GCTCTATCAACC GACGGCGATGA ATGCCTATCGCG ATGAGCTGCGCC AATACCTGCTGC GCGTGCCGGAA GATGATGAAGA GCAACAGCTTGA GGCGCTGCGGC AGTTTAAGCAGG CGCAGTTGCTGC GCGTGGCGGCG GCGGATATTGCC GGTACGTTGCCA GTAATGAAAGT GAGCGATCACTT AACCTGGCTGGC GGAAGCGATTAT TGATGCGGTGGT GCAGCAAGCCT GGGGGCAGATG GTGGCGCGTTAT GGCCAGCCAAC GCATCTGCACGA TCGCGAAGGGC GCGGTTTTGCGG TGGTCGGTTATG GCAAGCTGGGC GGCTGGGAGCT GGGTTACAGCTC CGATCTGGATCT GGTATTCCTGCA CGACTGCCCGAT GGATGTGATGAC CGATGGCGAGC GTGAAATCGATG GTCGCCAGTTCT ATTTGCGTCTCG CGCAGCGCGTG ATGCACCTGTTT AGCACGCGCAC GTCGTCCGGCAT CCTTTATGAAGT TGATGCGCGTCT GCGTCCATCTGG CGCTGCGGGGAT GCTGGTCACTAC TACGGAATCGTT CGCCGATTACCA GCAAAACGAAG CCTGGACGTGGG AACATCAGGCG CTGGCCCGTGCG CGCGTGGTGTAC GGCGATCCGCA ACTGACCGCCGA ATTTGACGCCAT TCGCCGCGATAT TCTGATGACGCC TCGCGACGGCGC AACGCTGCAAA CCGACGTGCGA GAAATGCGCGA GAAAATGCGTG CCCATCTTGGCA ACAAGCATAAA GACCGCTTCGAT CTGAAAGCCGAT GAAGGCGGTAT CACCGACATCGA GTTTATCGCCCA ATATCTGGTGCT GCGCTTTGCCCA TGACAAGCCGA AACTGACGCGCT GGTCGGATAATG TGCGCATTCTCG AAGGGCTGGCG CAAAACGGCAT CATGGAGGAGC AGGAAGCGCAG GCATTGACGCTG GCGTACACCACA TTGCGTGATGAG CTGCACCACCTG GCGCTGCAAGA GTTGCCGGGACA TGTGGCGCTCTC CTGTTTTGTCGC CGAGCGTGCGCT TATTAAAACCAG CTGGGACAAGT GGCTGGTGGAA CCGTGCGCCCCG GCGTAA
Notwithstanding the appended claims, the disclosure set forth herein is also defined by the following clauses:
[0179] 1. A method of producing one or more bacteria, comprising: [0180] (a) isolating bacteria from tissue or soil of a first plant; [0181] (b) introducing genetic variation into one or more of the bacteria to produce one or more variant bacteria; [0182] (c) exposing a plurality of plants to the variant bacteria; [0183] (d) isolating bacteria from tissue or soil of one of the plurality of plants, wherein the plant from which the bacteria is isolated has an improved trait relative to other plants in the plurality of plants; and [0184] (e) repeating steps (b) to (d) with bacteria isolated in step (d).
[0185] 2. The method of clause 1, wherein the improved trait is enhanced nitrogen fixation in the plant from which bacteria are isolated.
[0186] 3. The method of clause 1, wherein the genetic variation is a variation in a gene selected from the group consisting of: nifA, nifL, ntrB, ntrC, glnA, glnB, glnK, draT, amtB, glnD, glnE, nifJ, nifH, nifD, nifK, nifY, nifE, nifN, nifU, nifS, nifV, nifW, nifZ, nifM, nifF, nifB, and nifQ.
[0187] 4. The method of clause 1, wherein the genetic variation is a variation in a gene encoding a protein with functionality selected from the group consisting of: glutamine synthetase, glutaminase, glutamine synthetase adenylyltransferase, transcriptional activator, anti-transcriptional activator, pyruvate flavodoxin oxidoreductase, flavodoxin, or NAD+-dinitrogen-reductase ADP-D-ribosyltransferase.
[0188] 5. The method of clause 1, wherein the genetic variation is a mutation that results in one or more of: increased expression or activity of NifA or glutaminase; decreased expression or activity of NifL, NtrB, glutamine synthetase, GlnB, GlnK, DraT, AmtB; decreased adenylyl-removing activity of GlnE; or decreased uridylyl-removing activity of GlnD.
[0189] 6. The method of clause 1, wherein the genetic variation is a knock-out mutation.
[0190] 7. The method of clause 1, wherein the genetic variation results in elimination or abolishment of activity of a protein domain.
[0191] 8. The method of clause 1, wherein the genetic variation alters or abolishes a regulatory sequence of a target gene.
[0192] 9. The method of clause 1, wherein the genetic variation comprises insertion of a heterologous regulatory sequence.
[0193] 10. The method of clause 1, wherein the genetic variation comprises insertion of a regulatory sequence found within a genome of a bacterial species or genus corresponding to the bacteria into which the genetic variation is introduced.
[0194] 11. The method of clause 0, wherein the regulatory sequence is selected based on expression level of a gene in a bacterial culture or within plant tissue.
[0195] 12. The method of clause 1, wherein the genetic variation is produced by chemical mutagenesis.
[0196] 13. The method of clause 1, wherein step (c) further comprises exposing the plants to biotic or abiotic stressors.
[0197] 14. The method of clause 2, wherein bacteria isolated after repeating steps (b) to (d) one or more times produce 1% or more of nitrogen in a second plant of the same type as the first plant.
[0198] 15. The method of clause 2, wherein bacteria isolated after repeating steps (b) to (d) one or more times exhibit at least a 2-fold increase in nitrogen fixation as compared to bacteria isolated form the first plant.
[0199] 16. The method of clause 14, wherein the second plant is grown in the presence of fertilizer supplemented with glutamine, ammonia, or other chemical source of nitrogen.
[0200] 17. The method of clause 1, wherein the first plant is an agricultural crop plant.
[0201] 18. The method of clause 17, wherein the agricultural crop plant is selected from barley, rice, maize, wheat, sorghum, sweet corn, sugar cane, onions, tomatoes, strawberries, or asparagus.
[0202] 19. The method of clause 1, wherein the first or plants in the plurality of plants are a model plant.
[0203] 20. The method of clause 19, wherein the model plant is selected from Setaria, Brachypodium, or Arabidopsis.
[0204] 21. The method of clause 1, wherein the genetic variation is a pre-determined genetic variation that is specifically introduced to a target site.
[0205] 22. The method of clause 1, wherein the genetic variation is a random mutation within the target site.
[0206] 23. The method of clause 1, wherein step (a) further comprises performing genetic analysis of isolated bacteria.
[0207] 24. The method of clause 1, wherein step (b) further comprises applying a selection pressure to enrich for bacteria comprising the genetic variation.
[0208] 25. The method of clause 24, wherein the selection pressure comprises cleaving genomes lacking the genetic variation introduced to a target site, wherein cleavage occurs within 100 nucleotides of the target site.
[0209] 26. The method of clause 24, further comprising isolating bacteria that survive the selection pressure.
[0210] 27. The method of clause 25, wherein cleavage is directed by a site-specific nuclease selected from the group consisting of a Zinc Finger nuclease, a CRISPR nuclease, a TALE nuclease, or a meganuclease.
[0211] 28. The method of clause 27, wherein the site-specific nuclease is a CRISPR nuclease.
[0212] 29. The method of clause 1, wherein the genetic variation is an insertion or deletion of one or more nucleotides.
[0213] 30. The method of clause 1, wherein bacteria isolated after repeating steps (b) to (d) one or more times are endophytic, epiphytic, or rhizospheric.
[0214] 31. The method of clause 1, wherein bacteria isolated after repeating steps (b) to (d) one or more times comprise a plurality of different bacterial taxa.
[0215] 32. The method of clause 1, wherein the bacteria are isolated from plant tissue.
[0216] 33. The method of clause 1, wherein isolating bacteria in step (a) comprises isolating bacteria from a seed of the first plant.
[0217] 34. A method of increasing nitrogen fixation in a plant, comprising exposing the plant to bacteria comprising one or more genetic variations introduced into one or more genes regulating nitrogen fixation, wherein the bacteria produce 1% or more of nitrogen in the plant.
[0218] 35. The method of clause 34, wherein the bacteria produce 5% or more of nitrogen in the plant.
[0219] 36. The method of clause 34, wherein the bacteria produce 10% or more of nitrogen in the plant.
[0220] 37. The method of clause 34, wherein the bacteria produce the nitrogen in the presence of fertilizer supplemented with glutamine, ammonia, or other chemical source of supplemental nitrogen.
[0221] 38. The method of clause 34, wherein the genetic variation is a variation in a gene selected from the group consisting of: nifA, nifL, ntrB, ntrC, glutamine synthetase, glnA, glnB, glnK, draT, amtB, glutaminase, glnD, glnE, nifJ, nifH, nifD, nifK, nifY, nifE, nifN, nifU, nifS, nifV, nifW, nifZ, nifM, nifF, nifB, and nifQ.
[0222] 39. The method of clause 34, wherein the genetic variation is a mutation that results in one or more of: increased expression or activity of nifA or glutaminase; decreased expression or activity of nifL, ntrB, glutamine synthetase, glnB, glnK, draT, amtB; decreased adenylyl-removing activity of GlnE; or decreased uridylyl-removing activity of GlnD.
[0223] 40. The method of clause 34, wherein the genetic variation (a) is a knock-out mutation; (b) alters or abolishes a regulatory sequence of a target gene; or (c) comprises insertion of a heterologous regulatory sequence.
[0224] 41. The method of clause 34, wherein the bacteria are of the genus Enterobacter.
[0225] 42. The method of clause 34, wherein the bacteria are of the genus Rahnella.
[0226] 43. The method of claim 34, wherein the bacteria are endophytic, epiphytic, or rhizospheric.
[0227] 44. The method of clause 34, wherein the bacteria comprise a plurality of different bacterial taxa.
[0228] 45. The method of clause 34, wherein the plant is an agricultural crop plant.
[0229] 46. The method of any one of clauses 34-45, wherein the plant is a non-leguminous plant.
[0230] 47. The method of clause 45, wherein the agricultural crop plant is selected from sorghum, canola, tomato, strawberry, barley, rice, maize, and wheat.
[0231] 48. The method of clause 45, wherein the plant is a genetically modified organism (GMO).
[0232] 49. The method of clause 45, wherein the plant is not a genetically modified organism (GMO).
[0233] 50. The method of clause 45, wherein the plant has been genetically engineered or bred for efficient nitrogen use.
[0234] 51. A bacterial population comprising bacteria comprising one or more genetic variations introduced into one or more genes regulating nitrogen fixation, wherein the bacteria produce 1% or more of nitrogen in a plant grown in the presence of the population of bacteria.
[0235] 52. The bacterial population of clause 51, wherein the bacteria produce the nitrogen in the presence of fertilizer supplemented with glutamine, ammonia, or other chemical source of supplemental nitrogen.
[0236] 53. The bacterial population of clause 51, wherein the genetic variation is a variation in a gene selected from the group consisting of: nifA, nifL, ntrB, ntrC, glutamine synthetase, glnA, glnB, glnK, draT, amtB, glutaminase, glnD, glnE, nifJ, nifH, nifD, nifK, nifY, nifE, nifN, nifU, nifS, nifV, nifW, nifZ, nifM, nifF, nifB, and nifQ.
[0237] 54. The bacterial population of clause 51, wherein the genetic variation is a mutation that results in one or more of: increased expression of nifA or glutaminase; decreased expression of nifL, ntrB, glutamine synthetase, glnB, glnK, draT, amtB; decreased adenylyl-removing activity of GlnE; or decreased uridylyl-removing activity of GlnD.
[0238] 55. The bacterial population of clause 51, wherein the genetic variation (a) is a knock-out mutation; (b) alters or abolishes a regulatory sequence of a target gene; or (c) comprises insertion of a heterologous regulatory sequence.
[0239] 56. The bacterial population of clause 51, wherein the bacteria are Enterobacter.
[0240] 57. The bacterial population of clause 51, wherein the bacteria are Rahnella.
[0241] 58. The bacterial population of clause 51, wherein the bacteria are endophytic, epiphytic, or rhizospheric.
[0242] 59. The bacterial population of clause 51, wherein bacteria comprise a plurality of different bacterial taxa.
[0243] 60. A composition comprising the bacterial population of any one of clauses 51-59.
[0244] 61. The composition of clause 60, wherein the composition comprises the bacterial population coated on a surface of a seed.
[0245] 62. The composition of clause 60, wherein the composition is formulated as a liquid or powder.
[0246] 63. A bacterium having an ATCC deposit number of PTA-122293 or PTA-122294.