Genotypic and phenotypic diversity of Rhizobium isolated from chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.)

Abstract
The diversity of 16 strains of chickpea-infective rhizobia from various geographical origins was analysed using genotypic and phenotypic approaches. Multilocus enzyme electrophoresis was performed, and restriction fragment length polymorphisms of the amplified 16S+IGS (intergenic spacer) rRNA gene, assimilation of 147 carbon sources, antibiotic resistance, and tolerance to NaCl and extreme pH values and temperatures were tested. These approaches had different discriminating powers. Esterase polymorphisms gave a unique pattern for each strain, allowing this method to be used for strain fingerprinting. Genetic distances between strains were estimated. The three approaches used in this study yielded consistent results. They evidenced high heterogeneity among the strains, and made it possible to classify the strains into two clusters. Isozyme patterns for superoxide dismutase were particularly interesting, since they delineated the same two groups. The phenotypic tests clearly confirmed the existence of two genetic groups on the basis of 11 phenotypic characters. Owing to the large phylogenetic distance between the two groups of strains, the taxonomic status of chickpea-infective strains is discussed.Key words: Rhizobium sp. (Cicer arietinum L.), genetic diversity, multilocus enzyme electrophoresis, restriction fragment length polymorphisms, phenotypic diversity.