Intrinsic antibiotic resistance in relation to colony morphology in three populations of West African cowpea rhizobia |
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Authors: | Martha J. Sinclair Allan R.J. Eaglesham |
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Affiliation: | Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research at Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Rhizobia isolated from cowpeas (Vigna unguiculata (L.) Walp.) grown in three west African soils were examined for intrinsic resistance to five antibiotics and were scored for one of two colony morphologies. Half of the strains tested had a “wet”, slimy colony morphology and half had small discrete “dry”, non-slimy colonies. The populations as a whole were resistant to gentamicin (87%) but varied in their resistance to streptomycin, rifampicin, kanamycin and penicillin. Thirteen patterns of resistance were found for the 128 strains screened and strains within the same pattern usually had the same colony type. The most common pattern (32%) was resistance to all five antibiotics. Associations between resistances were random within populations and colony type. Each population was diverse, expressing from 6 to 8 patterns of resistance, but one population was relatively homogeneous, with 68% of its members exhibiting the same pattern. Correlations between intrinsic antibiotic resistance and colony type were demonstrated both for the west African cowpea rhizobia and for a broader group of cowpea miscellany rhizobia. The method was practical, rapid and reliable for identification of groups within populations. |
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