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Unlabelled: Diazotrophic bacteria can reduce atmospheric nitrogen into ammonia enabling bioavailability of the essential element. Many diazotrophs closely associate with plant roots increasing nitrogen availability, acting as plant growth promoters. These associations have the potential to reduce the need for costly synthetic fertilizers if they could be engineered for agricultural applications. However, despite the importance of diazotrophic bacteria, genetic tools are poorly developed in a limited number of species, in turn narrowing the crops and root microbiomes that can be targeted. Here, we report optimized protocols and plasmids to manipulate phylogenetically diverse diazotrophs with the goal of enabling synthetic biology and genetic engineering. Three broad-host-range plasmids can be used across multiple diazotrophs, with the identification of one specific plasmid (containing origin of replication RK2 and a kanamycin resistance marker) showing the highest degree of compatibility across bacteria tested. We then demonstrated modular expression by testing seven promoters and eleven ribosomal binding sites using proxy fluorescent proteins. Finally, we tested four small molecule inducible systems to report expression in three diazotrophs and demonstrated genome editing in Klebsiella michiganensis M5al.
One-sentence Summary: In this study, broad-host plasmids and synthetic genetic parts were leveraged to enable expression tools in a library of diazotrophic bacteria.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jimb/kuae033 | DOI Listing |
FEBS J
September 2025
Department of Molecular Microbiology, John Innes Centre, Norwich, UK.
Understanding the molecular basis of regulated nitrogen (N) fixation is essential for engineering N-fixing bacteria that fulfill the demand of crop plants for fixed nitrogen, reducing our reliance on synthetic nitrogen fertilizers. In Azotobacter vinelandii and many other members of Proteobacteria, the two-component system comprising the anti-activator protein (NifL) and the Nif-specific transcriptional activator (NifA)controls the expression of nif genes, encoding the nitrogen fixation machinery. The NifL-NifA system evolved the ability to integrate several environmental cues, such as oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon availability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Microbiol Rep
October 2025
Department of Biology, Marine Biology Section, University of Copenhagen, Helsingør, Denmark.
Due to climate change, sea ice more commonly retreats over the shelf breaks in the Arctic Ocean, impacting sea ice-pelagic-benthic coupling in the deeper basins. Nitrogen fixation (the reduction of dinitrogen gas to bioavailable ammonia by microorganisms called diazotrophs) is reported from Arctic shelf sediments but is unknown from the Arctic deep sea. We sampled five locations of deep-sea (900-1500 m) surface sediments in the central ice-covered Arctic Ocean to measure potential nitrogen fixation through long-term (> 280 days) stable-isotope (N) incubations and to study diazotroph community composition through amplicon sequencing of the functional marker gene nifH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroorganisms
August 2025
Laboratorio de Ecología Genómica y Agricultura Regenerativa, Tecnológico Nacional de Mexico, Instituto Tecnológico de Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Tuxtla Gutiérrez 29050, Chiapas, Mexico.
Enhancing crop productivity through biological strategies is critical for agriculture, particularly under conventional farming systems heavily reliant on chemical inputs. Plant probiotic bacteria offer promising alternatives by promoting plant growth and yield. This is the first field study to assess the effects of biofertilization with native rhizobial strains sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrob Cell Fact
August 2025
College of Biological Sciences, China Agricultural University, Beijing, 100193, China.
Background: Paenibacillus polymyxa WLY78, a Gram-positive diazotroph with plant growth promotion and phytopathogen suppression, represents a promising candidate for agricultural biofertilizers. However, its nitrogen fixation capacity is inherently limited by ammonium-mediated repression. Recent studies revealed that ammonium-tolerant nitrogen fixation in certain Paenibacillus species correlates with alanine overproduction mediated by alanine dehydrogenase (ADH) encoded by the ald gene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Data
August 2025
Key Laboratory of Agricultural Water Resources, Hebei Key Laboratory of Soil Ecology, Center for Agricultural Resources Research, Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shijiazhuang, 050021, China.
The root-zone microbiome of wheat, encompassing root, rhizosphere and bulk soil communities, harbors diverse diazotrophs that critically enhance wheat nitrogen use efficiency, promote wheat growth, and improve abiotic stress tolerance. Despite their agricultural significance, the composition and temporal dynamics of these beneficial diazotroph communities in saline-alkali ecosystems remain poorly resolved, particularly under the stresses of aridity and soil salinity. Systematic profiling of wheat-associated diazotroph ecology is imperative for developing innovative solutions to enhance wheat resilience and advance sustainable agriculture.
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