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1.
Azospirillum brasilense Cd localization in wheat roots was studied by light microscopy, by scanning, and by transmission electron microscopy.A. brasilense Cd cells were specifically identified immunocytochemically around and within root tissues.A. brasilense Cd cells found both outside and inside inoculated roots were intensively labeled with colloidal gold. In non-axenic cultures other bacterial strains or plant tissue were not labeled, thereby providing a non-interfering background. The roots of axenic grown wheat plants were colonized both externally and internally byA. brasilense Cd after inoculation, whereas non-axenic cultures were colonized by other bacterial strains as well.A. brasilense Cd cells were located on the root surface along the following zones: the root tip, the elongation, and the root-hair zone. However, bacteria were located within the cortex only in the latter two zones. In a number of observations, an electron dense material mediated the binding of bacterial cells to outer surfaces of epidermal cells, or between adjacent bacterial cells.A. brasilense Cd were found in root cortical intercellular spaces, but were not detected in either the endodermal layer or in the vascular system. This study proposes that in addition to root surface colonization,A. brasilense Cd forms intercellular associations within wheat roots.  相似文献   

2.
The root-to-root travel of the beneficial bacterium Azospirillum brasilense on wheat and soybean roots in agar, sand, and light-textured soil was monitored. We used a motile wild-type (Mot+) strain and a motility-deficient (Mot-) strain which was derived from the wild-type strain. The colonization levels of inoculated roots were similar for the two strains. Mot+ cells moved from inoculated roots (either natural or artificial roots in agar, sand, or light-textured soil) to noninoculated roots, where they formed a band-type colonization composed of bacterial aggregates encircling a limited part of the root, regardless of the plant species. The Mot- strain did not move toward noninoculated roots of either plant species and usually stayed at the inoculation site and root tips. The effect of attractants and repellents was the primary factor governing the motility of Mot+ cells in the presence of adequate water. We propose that interroot travel of A. brasilense is an essential preliminary step in the root-bacterium recognition mechanism. Bacterial motility might have a general role in getting Azospirillum cells to the site where firmer attachment favors colonization of the root system. Azospirillum travel toward plants is a nonspecific active process which is not directly dependent on nutrient deficiency but is a consequence of a nonspecific bacterial chemotaxis, influenced by the balance between attractants and possibly repellents leaked by the root.  相似文献   

3.
Migration of associative bacteria Azospirillum brasilense in semisolid media is performed mainly by swarming (Swa+ phenotype), which depends on the flagellar functioning and intercellular contacts. Non-swarming mutants of A. brasilense Sp245 lacking a polar flagellum migrate in semisolid media with microcolony formation using a unrevealed mechanism (Gri+ phenotype). The study of wheat root colonization dynamics demonstrated that A. brasilense Sp245 Gri+ mutants exhibited lower capacity for wheat root adsorption. However, after “anchoring” has occurred, both A. brasilense Sp245 and its Swa-Gri+ mutants colonized the growing roots with virtually the same efficiency. All strains under study formed microcolonies on the surface of roots, stimulated root branching, and exhibited changes in the composition of protein antigens exposed on the bacterial cell surface. Indirect evidence was obtained for enhanced production of genus-specific protein antigens in the process of A. brasilense Sp245 adaptation to growth on plant roots.  相似文献   

4.
Inoculation of soybean seedlings withAzospirillum brasilense Cd significantly reduced the membrane potential in every root part and was being maximal in the root elongation zone. Monitoring the proton efflux pattern of inoculated wheat roots by severalA. brasilense strains and byPseudomonas sp. for prolonged periods (up to 200h) revealed a change from the bimodal pattern of proton efflux of non inoculated roots. This change was not related to root colonization ability but to bacterial capacity to induce changes in root surface area. Continuous perfusion of the plant nutrient solution with a fresh solution (from inoculation time), eliminated the enhancing effect of inoculation on proton efflux. We propose thatA. brasilense inoculation influences membrane activity and subsequently proton efflux in roots, probably through the release of an as yet unidentified bacterial signal.  相似文献   

5.
The use of Azospirillum brasilense as a crop inoculant has increased in recent years. Thus, the compatibility of the inoculation technology with seed treatments using pesticides needs to be evaluated. In this study, we evaluated the effect of an insecticide and fungicide formulation on A. brasilense strain FP2 population by culturing and culture-independent approaches. In addition, we evaluated the impact of these pesticides on the ability of A. brasilense to promote plant growth by monitoring biometric traits (root and shoot dry mass and length) of wheat grown in Greenhouse conditions. Seed pesticide dressings, mainly fungicide, led to a significant mortality of A. brasilense over time. The ability of A. brasilense to promote wheat growth also decreased due to pesticide treatments combined with sowing delay. Considering that pesticides confer fitness advantages to the wheat in field condition, our results suggest that sowing within the first 4 h after inoculation maintain the beneficial effects of A. brasilense on wheat growth promotion. Furthermore, we conclude that inoculation and treatment of seeds with pesticides may be compatible techniques when carried out immediately before sowing.  相似文献   

6.
The capacity of Azospirillum brasilense to enhance the accumulation of K+, P, Ca2+, Mg2+, S, Na+, Mn2+, Fe2+, B, Cu2+, and Zn2+ in inoculated wheat and soybean plants was evaluated by using two different analytical methods with five A. brasilense strains originating from four distinct geographical regions. A Pseudomonas isolate from the rhizosphere of Zea mays seedlings was included as a control. All A. brasilense strains significantly improved wheat and soybean growth by increasing root and shoot dry weight and root surface area. The degree of plant response to inoculation varied among the different strains of A. brasilense. All strains were capable of colonizing roots, but the best root colonizer, Pseudomonas sp., had no effect on plant growth. The numbers of organisms of Brazilian strains Sp-245 and Sp-246 colonizing roots were similar regardless of the host plant. Numbers of organisms for the other strains were directly dependent on the host plant. The main feature characterizing mineral accumulation in inoculated plants was that all inoculation treatments changed the mineral balance of the plants, but in an inconsistent manner. Enhancement of mineral uptake by plants also varied among strains to a great extent and was directly dependent on the strain-plant combination; i.e., a strain capable of increasing accumulation of a particular ion in one plant species or cultivar often lacked the ability to do so in another. Minerals in inoculated plants were not evenly distributed in different plant tissues, and the changes varied among groups of plants within each bacterial strain inoculation treatment. We suggest that, although A. brasilense strains are capable of changing the mineral balance and content of plants, it is unlikely that this ability is a general mechanism responsible for plant improvement by A. brasilense.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The response of rice plants to inoculation with an arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungus, Azospirillum brasilense, or combination of both microorganisms, was assayed under well-watered or drought stress conditions. Water deficit treatment was imposed by reducing the amount of water added, but AM plants, with a significantly higher biomass, received the same amount of water as non-AM plants, with a poor biomass. Thus, the water stress treatment was more severe for AM plants than for non-AM plants. The results showed that AM colonization significantly enhanced rice growth under both water conditions, although the greatest rice development was reached in plants dually inoculated under well-watered conditions. Water level did not affect the efficiency of photosystem II, but both AM and A. brasilense inoculations increased this value. AM colonization increased stomatal conductance, particularly when associated with A. brasilense, which enhanced this parameter by 80% under drought conditions and by 35% under well-watered conditions as compared to single AM plants. Exposure of AM rice to drought stress decreased the high levels of glutathione that AM plants exhibited under well-watered conditions, while drought had no effect on the ascorbate content. The decrease of glutathione content in AM plants under drought stress conditions led to enhance lipid peroxidation. On the other hand, inoculation with the AM fungus itself increased ascorbate and proline as protective compounds to cope with the harmful effects of water limitation. Inoculation with A. brasilense also enhanced ascorbate accumulation, reaching a similar level as in AM plants. These results showed that, in spite of the fact that drought stress imposed by AM treatments was considerably more severe than non-AM treatments, rice plants benefited not only from the AM symbiosis but also from A. brasilense root colonization, regardless of the watering level. However, the beneficial effects of A. brasilense on most of the physiological and biochemical traits of rice plants were only clearly visible when the plants were mycorrhized. This microbial consortium was effective for rice plants as an acceptable and ecofriendly technology to improve plant performance and development.  相似文献   

9.
Response of wheat to Azospirillum brasilense Sp-248 inoculation with different N-fertilizer levels using seawater irrigation was investigated. All inoculated treatments increased plant height, shoot and root dry weight, and tiller number in compared with uninoculated treatments. Yield parameters measured were also increased due to the inoculation. In terms of the effect of saline irrigation, there were no significant differences in growth and yield parameters in plants treated with tap water and others irrigated with 8.0% seawater concentration. This would indicate a relatively high tolerance of A. brasilense to saline irrigation and its ability to reduce the deleterious effects of saline on growth by increasing the plant’s adaptation. However, increasing the seawater concentration in the irrigation water to 16.0% significantly decreased all tested parameters. Inoculation treatments generally increased NPKCa contents and decreased sodium ratio of the grains in compared with the uninoculated treatments. Overall results clearly revealed that the Azospirillum inoculation saved about 20 units of N-fertilizer and that saving was made economically feasible by decreasing the chemical fertilizers needed, improving the nitrogen content and counteracting the effects of salinity.  相似文献   

10.
Inter-root movement and dispersion of the beneficial bacterium Azospirillum brasilense were monitored in root systems of wheat seedlings growing in the field and in growth chamber soil trays. Two strains were used, a motile wild-type strain (Cd, mot+) and a motility deficient strain (mot), which was derived from the Cd strain. Root colonization by two wild-type strains (Cd and Sp-245) was studied in 64 plant species growing in pots in the greenhouse. The two wild-type strains of A. brasilense were capable of colonizing all tested plant species. In soil trays and in the field, mot+ cells moved from inoculated roots to non-inoculated roots of either wheat plants or weeds growing in the same field plot, but the mot strain did not move toward non-inoculated roots of either plant species. In the field, both mot+ and mot strains of A. brasilense survived well in the rhizosphere of wheat for 30 days, but only mot+ moved between different weeds, regardless of the species, botanical family, or whether they were annuals or perennials. In plant-free, water-saturated soils, either in columns or in the field, both strains remained at the inoculation site and did not move.It is proposed (a) that A. brasilense is not a plant-specific bacterium and that (b) colonization of the entire root system in soil is an active process determined by bacterial motility; it is not plant specific, but depends on the presence of plants. Correspondence to: Y. Bashan  相似文献   

11.
The effect of cellulase and pectinase on bacterial colonization of wheat was studied by three different experiments. In the first experiment, the root colonization of 3 wheat cultivars (Ghods, Roshan and Omid) by two A. brasilense strains (Sp7 and Dol) was compared using pre-treated roots with cellulase and pectinase, and non-treated with these enzymes (control). Although the root colonization varied greatly among strain-plant combinations in controls, the pre-treatment of roots with polysaccharide degrading enzymes significantly increased the bacterial count in roots, regardless of the strain-plant combination. This might be an indication that cell wall may act as an important factor in plant-Azospirillum interaction. In the second experiment, the root cellulase activity of the same wheat cultivars treated with and without the two Azospirillum brasilense, strains (Sp7 and Dol) was compared. The pre-treatment of wheat roots with Azospirillum enhanced the cellulase activity of wheat root extracts. Thus, the cellulase activity might participate in the initial colonization of wheat roots by Azospirillum. The comparison of the cellulase activity of root extracts within inoculated and non-inoculated seedlings showed that the inoculation had enhanced the cellulase activity in root extracts, but this effect was directly dependent on the strain-plant combination. Strain Sp7 stimulated the highest cellulase activity in cv. Roshan, but strain Dol induced the highest enzyme activity in cv. Ghods. In the third experiment, several growth parameters of those 3 wheat cultivars treated with and without those two bacterial strains (Sp7 and Dol) were compared. The highest magnitude of growth responses caused by Sp7 strain was in the cv Roshan, but Dol strain stimulated the highest growth in cv Ghods. Therefore, effective colonization may contribute to more growth responses.  相似文献   

12.
Azospirillum is a rhizobacterial genus containing plant growth-promoting species associated with different crops worldwide. Azospirillum brasilense strains exhibit a growth-promoting effect by means of phytohormone production and possibly by N2 fixation. However, one of the most important factors for achieving an increase in crop yield by plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria is the survival of the inoculant in the rhizosphere, which is not always achieved. The objective of this study was to develop quantitative PCR protocols for the strain-specific quantification of A. brasilense FP2. A novel approach was applied to identify strain-specific DNA sequences based on a comparison of the genomic sequences within the same species. The draft genome sequences of A. brasilense FP2 and Sp245 were aligned, and FP2-specific regions were filtered and checked for other possible matches in public databases. Strain-specific regions were then selected to design and evaluate strain-specific primer pairs. The primer pairs AzoR2.1, AzoR2.2, AzoR5.1, AzoR5.2, and AzoR5.3 were specific for the A. brasilense FP2 strain. These primer pairs were used to monitor quantitatively the population of A. brasilense in wheat roots under sterile and nonsterile growth conditions. In addition, coinoculations with other plant growth-promoting bacteria in wheat were performed under nonsterile conditions. The results showed that A. brasilense FP2 inoculated into wheat roots is highly competitive and achieves high cell numbers (∼107 CFU/g [fresh weight] of root) in the rhizosphere even under nonsterile conditions and when coinoculated with other rhizobacteria, maintaining the population at rather stable levels for at least up to 13 days after inoculation. The strategy used here can be applied to other organisms whose genome sequences are available.  相似文献   

13.
Fifteen-day-old variety NA 56-79 sugar cane seedlings were inoculated with Azospirillum brasilense and Glomus intrarradix. This article aims at examining changes in sugar cane root seedlings inoculated with Glomus intrarradix and Azospirillum brasilense, the increase in microbial biomass and the acetylene reduction process as well. The internal root colonization was studied 20 days after inoculation using scanning and a transmission electron microscope. Both microorganisms entered the sugar cane root through the emergent lateral roots. The microorganisms were capable of coexisting both intra and intercellularly, producing changes in the cell wall, thus allowing colonization and interaction between the organisms. These changes increased the number of microorganisms inside the root as well as acetylene nitrogen reduction. Sugar cane plant biomass increased with joint-inoculation. The number of endophytic microorganisms and nitrogen fixing activity increased when they were colonized by Azospirillum and Glomus together.  相似文献   

14.
The present greenhouse study was undertaken to evaluate the effects of co-inoculating methylotrophic Methylobacterium oryzae CBMB20 along with nitrogen-fixing Azospirillum brasilense CW903 or a phosphate solubilizing bacterium Burkholderia pyrrocinia CBPB-HOD on the growth and nutrient uptake of tomato, red pepper and rice. Seed inoculation and soil/foliar application of the bacterial strains alone or under dual inoculation increased the plant growth in terms of shoot or root length and increased the nutrient uptake in the plants studied compared to uninoculated control plants. Co-inoculation of M. oryzae CBMB20 with A. brasilense CW903 or B. pyrrocinia CBPB-HOD improved the N and P concentration of plants, while the results varied among the plant species tested. Also, co-inoculation of the bacterial strains increased the activity of nitrogenase, urease and phosphatase enzymes in soil when compared to uninoculated control or individual inoculations. Though the inoculation effects were analyzed at an early stage of plant growth, the results conclusively suggest that M. oryzae being compatible with other microorganisms in the rhizosphere can potentially be used as individual inoculant or co-inoculated with other plant growth promoting bacteria to increase the production in sustainable agricultural systems.  相似文献   

15.
Saubidet  María I.  Fatta  Nora  Barneix  Atilio J. 《Plant and Soil》2002,245(2):215-222
Azospirillium brasilense is a rhizosphere bacteria that has been reported to improve yield when inoculated on wheat plants. However, the mechanisms through which this effect is induced is still unclear. In the present work, we have studied the effects of inoculating a highly efficient A. brasilense strain on wheat plant grown in 5 kg pots with soil in a greenhouse, under three N regimes (0, 3 or 16 mM NO3 , 50 ml/pot once or twice-a -week), and in disinfected or non-disinfected soil. At the booting stage, the inoculated roots in both soils showed a similar colonization by Azospirillum sp. that was not affected by N addition. The plants grown in the disinfected soil showed a higher biomass, N content and N concentration than those in the non-disinfected soil, and in both soils the inoculation stimulated plant growth, N accumulation, and N and NO3 concentration in the tissues.At maturity, the inoculated plants showed a higher biomass, grain yield and N content than the uninoculated ones in both soils, and a higher grain protein concentration than the uninoculated. It is concluded that in the present experiments, A. brasilenseincreased plant growth by stimulating nitrogen uptake by the roots.  相似文献   

16.
This study analyzes the effects of procyanidin B2 on early wheat plant growth and plant biochemical responses promoted by lipopolysaccharides (LPS) derived from the rhizobacteria Azospirillum brasilense Sp245. Measurements of leaf, root length, fresh weight, and dry weight showed in vitro plant growth stimulation 4 days after treatment with A. brasilense as well as LPS. Superoxide anion (O2 ·?) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) levels increased in seedling roots treated with LPS (100 μg mL?1). The chlorophyll content in leaf decreased while the starch content increased 24 h after treatment in seedling roots. The LPS treatment induced a high increase in total peroxidase (POX) (EC 1.11.1.7) activity and ionically bound cell wall POX content in roots, when compared to respective controls. Early plant growth and biochemical responses observed in wheat seedlings treated with LPS were inhibited by the addition of procyanidin B2 (5 μg mL?1), a B type proanthocyanidin (PAC), plant-derived polyphenolic compound with binding properties of LPS. All results suggest first that the ionically bound cell wall POX enzymes could be a molecular target of A. brasilense LPS, and second that the recognition or association of LPS by plant cells is required to activate plant responses. This last event could play a critical role during plant growth regulation by A. brasilense LPS.  相似文献   

17.
We studied changes in the physiological and biochemical parameters of wheat (Triticum aestivum L. ??Saratovskaya 29??) seedlings treated with lipopolysaccharide isolated from the outer membrane of the associative bacterium Azospirillum brasilense Sp245. The obtained data were compared with (i) the results of plant inoculation with whole Sp245 cells and (ii) the effects exerted by the lipopolysaccharide and whole cells of the enterobacterium Escherichia coli K12 and the specific legume symbiont Rhizobium leguminosarum 249. The functional activity of meristematic cells was judged by their mitotic index and by the results of immunochemical determination of the proliferative antigen of initials, a molecular marker for wheat meristem cells. Treatment of the seedling root system with 10 ??g mL?1 of Sp245 lipopolysaccharide increased the mitotic index (1.8-fold) and the antigen content (approximately 1.4-fold). These increases were comparable to the effects produced by whole cell inoculation (2- and 1.4-fold, respectively). Our findings give grounds to consider lipopolysaccharide as an active component of the Azospirillum cell surface that not only determines bacterial contact interactions with wheat roots but also participates in the induction of plant responses to these interactions. We finally discuss the linkage between the proliferative antigen of initials and the transduction of a hormonal signal to the cell, as well as the informational value of this antigen as an indicator of effectiveness of plant?Cbacterial interactions.  相似文献   

18.
A number of soil-borne microorganisms, such as mycorrhizal fungi and rhizobacteria, establish mutualistic interactions with plants, which can indirectly affect other organisms. Knowledge of the plant-mediated effects of mutualistic microorganisms is limited to aboveground insects, whereas there is little understanding of what role beneficial soil bacteria may play in plant defense against root herbivory. Here, we establish that colonization by the beneficial rhizobacterium Azospirillum brasilense affects the host selection and performance of the insect Diabrotica speciosa. Root larvae preferentially orient toward the roots of non-inoculated plants versus inoculated roots and gain less weight when feeding on inoculated plants. As inoculation by A. brasilense induces higher emissions of (E)-β-caryophyllene compared with non-inoculated plants, it is plausible that the non-preference of D. speciosa for inoculated plants is related to this sesquiterpene, which is well known to mediate belowground insect-plant interactions. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study showing that a beneficial rhizobacterium inoculant indirectly alters belowground plant-insect interactions. The role of A. brasilense as part of an integrative pest management (IPM) program for the protection of corn against the South American corn rootworm, D. speciosa, is considered.  相似文献   

19.
Tomato seeds were inoculated with the plant growth–promoting rhizobacteria Azospirillum brasilense FT326, and changes in parameters associated with plant growth were evaluated 15 days after inoculation. Azospirilla were localized on roots and within xylematic tissue. An increase in shoot and root fresh weight, main root hair length, and root surface indicated that inoculation with A. brasilense FT 326 resulted in plant growth improvement. The levels of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) and ethylene, two of the phytohormones related to plant growth, were higher in inoculated plants. Exogenously supplied ethylene mimicked the effect of inoculation, and the addition of an inhibitor of its synthesis or of its physiological activity completely blocked A. brasilense growth promotion. Based on our results, we propose that the process of growth promotion triggered by A. brasilense inoculation involves a signaling pathway that has ethylene as a central, positive regulator.  相似文献   

20.
Root colonization studies, employing immunofluorescence and using locally isolated strains, showed thatEnterbacter sp. QH7 andEnterobacter agglomerans AX12 attached more readily to the roots of most plants compared withAzospirillum brasilense JM82. Heat treatment of either root or inoculum significantly decreased the adsorption of bacteria to the root surface. Kallar grass and rice root exudates sustained the growth ofA. brasilense JM82,Enterobacter sp. QH7 andE. agglomerans AX12 in Hoagland and Fahraeus medium. All the strains colonized kallar grass and rice roots in an axenic culture system. However, in studies involving mixed cultures,A. brasilense JM82 was inhibited byEnterobacter sp. QH7 in kallar grass rhizosphere and the simultaneous presence ofEnterobacter sp. QH7 andE. agglomerans AX12 suppressed the growth ofA. brasilense JM82 in rice rhizosphere. The bacterial colonization pattern changed from dispersed to aggregated within 3 days of inoculation. The colonization sites corresponded mainly to the areas where root mucigel was present. The area around the point of emergence of lateral roots usually showed maximum colonization.  相似文献   

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