Numerical Taxonomic Analysis of Some Strains of Rhizobium spp. That Uses a Qualitative Coding of Immunodiffusion Reactions

Appl Environ Microbiol. 1988 Jul;54(7):1825-30. doi: 10.1128/aem.54.7.1825-1830.1988.

Abstract

Antigenic relationships among seven strains of Bradyrhizobium japonicum were examined by immunodiffusion reactions, in which cells of each strain were reacted against each of the seven corresponding antisera. Similar analyses were performed with Rhizobium trifolii (28 strains), Rhizobium meliloti (9 strains), and rhizobia of the cowpea miscellany (13 strains). Antigens and antisera were reacted within each species only; serological interspecies cross-reactions were not performed. The results, scored qualitatively as reactions of identity, cross-reactions, or no reaction, were formed into datum matrices and used to analyze the relationships between strains by applying the association measure of Bray and Curtis (J. R. Bray and J. T. Curtis, Ecol. Monogr. 27:325-349, 1957) and the UPGMA clustering algorithm (P. H. A. Sneath and R. R. Sokal, Numerical Taxonomy, 1973). No two strains were regarded as being serologically identical unless each gave the same results as the other in each immunodiffusion reaction against every antiserum. Despite the high level of cross-reactions and reactions of identity (totalling 93% of all cell-antiserum combinations) among strains of R. trifolii and R. meliloti, no strains were identical by the criterion described above; however, the strains of these species clustered rapidly and fused at the 70% similarity level. The B. japonicum strains and the rhizobia of the cowpea miscellany were much less cross-reactive (67 and 86% of all combinations were negative, respectively), and they clustered more slowly. The strains of B. japonicum fused completely only at the 4% similarity level, whereas of the 13 cowpea-nodulating strains, 4 reacted as two pairs of identical strains and 6 remained unfused.