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The elite strain INPA03-11B approved as a cowpea inoculant in Brazil represents a new Bradyrhizobium species and it has high adaptability to stressful soil conditions.

Fatima Maria de Souza MoreiraDaniele Cabral MichelRaysa Marques Cardoso
Published in: Brazilian journal of microbiology : [publication of the Brazilian Society for Microbiology] (2024)
The strain INPA03-11B T , isolated in the 1980s from nodules of Centrosema sp. collected in Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil, was approved by the Brazilian Ministry of Agriculture as a cowpea inoculant in 2004. Since then, several studies have been conducted regarding its phenotypic, genetic, and symbiotic characteristics under axenic and field conditions. Phenotypic features demonstrate its high adaptability to stressful soil conditions, such as tolerance to acidity, high temperatures, and 13 antibiotics, and, especially, its high symbiotic efficiency with cowpea and soybean, proven in the field. The nodC and nifH phylogenies placed the INPA strain in the same clade as the species B. macuxiense BR 10303 T which was also isolated from the Amazon region. The sequencing of the 16S rRNA ribosomal gene and housekeeping genes, as well as BOX-PCR profiles, showed its potential as a new species, which was confirmed by a similarity percentage of 94.7% and 92.6% in Average Nucleotide Identity with the closest phylogenetically related species Bradyrhizobium tropiciagri CNPSo1112 T and B. viridifuturi SEMIA690 T , respectively. dDDH values between INPA03-11B T and both CNPSo 1112 T and SEMIA690 T were respectively 58.5% and 48.1%, which are much lower than the limit for species boundary (70%). Therefore, we propose the name Bradyrhizobium amazonense for INPA03-11B T (= BR3301 = SEMIA6463).
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • body composition
  • binding protein
  • drug administration