Abstract
We obtained two beneficial mutants of Bradyrhizobium japonicum USDA110 with increased nitrous oxide (N(2)O) reductase (N(2)OR) activity by introducing a plasmid containing a mutated B. japonicum dnaQ gene (pKQ2) and performing enrichment culture under selection pressure for N(2)O respiration. Mutation of dnaQ, which encodes the epsilon subunit of DNA polymerase III, gives a strong mutator phenotype in Escherichia coli. pKQ2 introduction into B. japonicum USDA110 increased the frequency of occurrence of colonies spontaneously resistant to kanamycin. A series of repeated cultivations of USDA110 with and without pKQ2 was conducted in anaerobic conditions under 5% (vol/vol) or 20% (vol/vol) N(2)O atmosphere. At the 10th cultivation cycle, cell populations of USDA110(pKQ2) showed higher N(2)OR activity than the wild-type strains. Four bacterial mutants lacking pKQ2 obtained by plant passage showed 7 to 12 times the N(2)OR activity of the wild-type USDA110. Although two mutants had a weak or null fix phenotype for symbiotic nitrogen fixation, the remaining two (5M09 and 5M14) had the same symbiotic nitrogen fixation ability and heterotrophic growth in culture as wild-type USDA110.
