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1 Abstract Mutualisms evolve over time when individuals belonging to different species derive fitness benefits through the exchange of resources and services. Although prevalent in natural and managed ecosystems, mutualisms can be destabilized by environmental fluctuations that alter the costs and benefits of maintaining the symbiosis. In the rhizobia-legume mutualism, bacteria provide reduced nitrogen to the host plant in exchange for photosynthates that support bacterial metabolism. However, this relationship can be disrupted by the addition of external nitrogen sources to the soil, such as fertilizers. While the molecular mechanisms underpinning the rhizobia-legume symbiosis are well-characterized, the genome-wide fitness effects of nitrogen enrichment on symbiotic rhizobia are less clear. Here, we inoculated a randomly barcoded transposon-site sequencing (RB-TnSeq) library of the bacteriumEnsifer(Sinorhizobium)melilotiinto soils containing a host plant, alfalfa (Medicago sativa), under conditions of low and high nitrogen availability. Although plant performance remained robust to fertilization, nitrogen enrichment altered gene fitness for specific traits and functions in the rhizobial partner. Genes involved in carbohydrate metabolism showed increased fitness irrespective of soil nutrient content, whereas fitness gains in quorum-sensing genes were only observed in high-nitrogen environments. We also documented reductions in the fitness of nucleotide metabolism and cell-growth genes, while genes from oxidative phosphorylation and various amino-acid biosynthesis pathways were detrimental to fitness under elevated soil nitrogen, underscoring the complex trade-offs in rhizobial responses to nutrient enrichment. Our experimental functional genomics approach identified gene functions and pathways across allE. melilotireplicons that may be associated with the disruption of an agronomically important mutualism. 2ImportanceUnderstanding the evolutionary dynamics of the rhizobia-legume mutualism is important for elucidating how plant-soil-microbe interactions operate in natural and managed ecosystems. Legumes constitute a significant portion of global food production and generate 25% of all terrestrially fixed nitrogen. The application of chemical fertilizers can disrupt the mutualism by altering the selective pressures experienced by symbiotic rhizobia, potentially affecting gene fitness throughout the microbial genome and leading to the evolution of less productive or cooperative mutualists. To investigate how exogenous nitrogen inputs influence gene fitness during the complex rhizobial lifecycle, we used a barcoded genome-wide mutagenesis screen to quantify gene-level fitness across the rhizobial genome during symbiosis and identify metabolic functions affected by nitrogen enrichment. Our findings provide genomic insight into potential eco-evolutionary mechanisms by which symbioses are maintained or degraded over time in response to changing environmental conditions.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available November 28, 2025
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Many bacterial traits important to host-microbe symbiosis are determined by genes carried on extrachromosomal replicons such as plasmids, chromids, and integrative and conjugative elements. Multiple such replicons often coexist within a single cell and, due to horizontal mobility, have patterns of variation and evolutionary histories that are distinct from each other and from the bacterial chromosome. In nitrogen-fixing Rhizobium, genes carried on multiple plasmids make up almost 50% of the genome, are necessary for the formation of symbiosis, and underlie bacterial traits including host plant benefits. Thus the genomics and transmission of plasmids in Rhizobium underlie the ecology and evolution of this important model symbiont. Here we leverage a natural population of clover-associated Rhizobium in which partner quality has declined in response to long-term nitrogen fertilization. We use 62 novel, reference-quality genomes to characterize 257 replicons in the plasmidome and study their genomics and transmission patterns. We find that, of the four most frequent plasmid types, two (types II & III) have more stable size, larger core genomes, and track the chromosomal phylogeny (display more vertical transmission), while others (types I & IV – the symbiosis plasmid, or pSym) vary substantially in size, shared gene content, and have phylogenies consistent with frequent horizontal transmission. We also find differentiation in pSym subtypes driven by long-term nitrogen fertilization. Our results highlight the variation in plasmid transmission dynamics within a single symbiont and implicate plasmid horizontal transmission in the evolution of partner quality.more » « less
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ABSTRACT Despite decades of research, we are only just beginning to understand the forces maintaining variation in the nitrogen-fixing symbiosis between rhizobial bacteria and leguminous plants. In their recent work, Alexandra Weisberg and colleagues use genomics to document the breadth of mobile element diversity that carries the symbiosis genes of Bradyrhizobium in natural populations. Studying rhizobia from the perspective of their mobile genetic elements, which have their own transmission modes and fitness interests, reveals novel mechanisms for the generation and maintenance of diversity in natural populations of these ecologically and economically important mutualisms.more » « less
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