Identification of frankia strains by direct DNA hybridization of crushed nodules

Appl Environ Microbiol. 1988 Oct;54(10):2500-3. doi: 10.1128/aem.54.10.2500-2503.1988.

Abstract

A hybridization procedure was developed to identify Frankia strains inside actinorhizae by direct probing of crushed root nodules. The probe consisted of an indigenous cryptic plasmid. This well-conserved, 8-kilobase plasmid was detected in Frankia isolates that were very close taxonomically (they possessed a very high DNA sequence homology). The probe did not hybridize to the DNA of Frankia isolates which did not carry the plasmid. Endophyte DNA was extracted by a modification of a technique originally developed for the detection of plasmids in Frankia isolates. The hybridization procedure applied to nodules collected in a stand of alder permitted determination of a distribution map of the plasmid-bearing Frankia strains.