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1.
Summary Cosmid clones encoding the recA gene of Azospirillum brasilense were isolated by intergeneric complementation of an Escherichia coli recA mutant. Site-directed Tn5 mutagenesis and subcloning of one complementing cosmid clone allowed us to localize the A. brasilense recA gene on a 1.2 kb DNA fragment. One Tn5 insertion that inactivates the cloned recA gene was crossed into the chromosome of A. brasilense by marker exchange. The resulting A. brasilense recA mutant showed increased sensitivity to the DNA methylating agent methyl methanesulfonate and to ultraviolet light and had at least one hundredfold reduced recombinational activity compared to the parent strain.  相似文献   

2.
Azospirillum brasilense strains, CDJA and A40, capable of growing at sub-optimal temperature were tagged with stable chromogenic marker Tn5-lacZ. Mutants were screened for plant growth promoting activities at 20, 22, 25, 30 and 37 °C. Mutants MC48 and MA3 were found to fix nitrogen upto 85% and produced indole acetic acid (IAA) and siderophore in isogenic manner to their respective wild type strains, CDJA and A40, at sub-optimal temperatures. Co-inoculation of mutants with their respective parent (1:1 ratio) to the wheat revealed that colonization potential of the mutants was affected greatly. Tn5-lacZ tagged mutants MC48 and MA3 were found isogenic to their respective wild type Azospirillum strain, with regards to plant growth promoting activities and root colonization ability. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

3.
Fischer  Sonia  Rivarola  Viviana  Mori  Gladys 《Plant and Soil》2000,225(1-2):187-191
The effect of saline stress on the colonization of wheat was analyzed by using Azospirillum brasilense Cd carrying the fusion of the reporter gene lacZ (β-galactosidase) with the N2 fixation gene promoter nifA. Colonization was also studied by inducing para-nodules on wheat roots using 2,4-D, establishing that these structures acted as bacterium protected niches. Bacteria grown under standard conditions were distributed along the whole root system, except the elongation zone, and colonized the para-nodules. Bacteria experiencing saline stress were mainly localized at the root tips and the lateral roots. In 2,4-D treated plants, most of the bacteria were present around the basal surface of the modified lateral root structures. Using the MPN method, there were not statistical differences between the numbers of control and stressed bacteria. As this method estimates endophytic colonization in contrast with the one using X-gal, which emphasizes colonization on the root surface, both procedures demonstrated to be necessary, concluding that salt treatment reduced surface colonization (X-gal) but not colonization inside the root. The bacterial counts made on inoculated wheat roots indicated higher numbers of both control and stressed bacteria in roots treated with 2,4-D compared with untreated roots. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

4.
Nitrous oxide reduction can consistently be demonstrated with high activities in cells of Azospirillum brasilense Sp 7 which are grown anaerobically in the presence of low amounts of nitrite. Azospirillum can even grow anaerobically with nitrous oxide in the absence of any other respiratory electron acceptor. Nitrous oxide reduction by Azospirillum is inhibited by acetylene, amytal and weakly by carbon monoxide. Azospirillum converts nitrous oxide to molecular nitrogen without the formation of ammonia. The cells must, therefore, be supplied with ammonia from nitrogen fixation during anaerobic growth with nitrous oxide. When no other nitrogen compound besides nitrous oxide is available in the medium, the bacteria synthesize nitrogenase from protein reserves in about 2 h. Nitrogenase synthesis is blocked by chloramphenicol under these conditions. In contrast, the addition of nitrate or nitrite to the medium represses the synthesis of nitrogenase. Nitrous oxide reduction by Azospirillum and other microorganisms is possibly of ecological significance, because the reaction performed by the bacteria may remove nitrous oxide from soils.  相似文献   

5.
Azospirillum brasilense sp7 was exposed to 2mm Zn2+ in minimal medium upon which the cells turned black and non-motile within 24 h. A streptomycin-resistant variant did not exhibit this phenomenon and is sensitized to zinc. A prelude to encystation was the elution of a melanin-like pigment into the medium.The authors are with the Department of Genetics, University of Delhi South Campus, Benito Juarez Road, New Delhi-110021, India  相似文献   

6.
The agronomic impact of genetically tagged azospirilla (Azospirillum brasilense)was assessed in open field and their fluctuation were monitored in the soil/rhizosphere. Strain performance, upon inoculation of sorghum, was evaluated over a two-years period; agronomic treatments included nitrogen application (0, 80, 160 kg ha–1), and types of inoculant (Sp245 lacZ, Sp6 gusA, Sp6 IAA++ gusA). Grain yield was higher for inoculated seed plots than in non-inoculated ones, whereas nitrogen content, biomass of plant residues and nitrogen in plant residues gave values that were not statistically different. Root length density (RLD) of sorghum at the end of the stem elongation stage was affected only by the indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) overproducer Azospirillum strain (A. brasilense Sp6 IAA++ gusA) with respect to the normal IAA producer (A. brasilense Sp6 gusA), being higher in the first 40 cm of depth, notwithstanding the level of nitrogen fertilization. The traceability of the released genetically modified strains enabled to monitor their ability to colonise soil and roots. Moreover, the genetic modification per se vs. the non-modified counterpart, did not affect the culturable aerobic population in soil, microfungi, streptomycetes, fluorescent pseudomonads, soil microbial biomass, or some microbial activities, all selected as important indicators.  相似文献   

7.
Treatment of wheat seedlings with the synthetic auxin, 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-d), induced nodule-like structures or tumours (termed para-nodules) where lateral roots would normally emerge. The formation of these structures promoted increased rates of acetylene reduction at reduced oxygen pressure (0.02–0.04 atm) in seedling inoculated with Azospirillum brasilense, compared to seedlings inoculated without auxin treatment. Fluorescent microscopy, laser scanning confocal microscopy and direct bacterial counts all showed that the 2,4-d treatment stimulated internal colonization of the root system with azospirilla, particularly in the basal region of the nodular structures. Both colonization with azospirilla and acetylene-reducing activity were further stimulated by simultaneous treatment with another synthetic auxin, naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA) and, less reliably, with indoleacetic acid (IAA) and indolebutyric acid (IBA). These auxins produced shortening of many initiated lateral roots, although 20 times the concentration of NAA was required to achieve rounded structures similar to those obtained with 2,4-d. Treatment with NAA, IAA or IBA alone also stimulated colonization with azospirilla and acetylene reduction rates at 0.02 atm oxygen, but less effectively than by treatment with 2,4-d. Such exogenous treatments of wheat seedlings with synthetic growth regulators provide an effective laboratory model for studies on the development of a N2-fixing system in cereals.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of two Azospirillum strains (SP-7, Dol) was compared on root proton efflux and root enlargement of three wheat cultivars (Ghods, Omid and Roshan). Root colonization varied greatly among strain–plant combinations. Inoculation enhanced proton efflux and root elongation of wheat roots but this effect was directly dependent on the strain–plant combination. Strain SP-7 stimulated the greatest proton efflux and root elongation in cv. Roshan, whereas strain Dol induced the best effect on both these phenomena in cv. Ghods. Based on positive correlation between these two phenomena, it was suggests that proton efflux is related to increasing of root length by Azospirillum inoculation. The number of bacteria of both Azospirillum strains in root of cv. Omid was less than the other cultivars. Proton extrusion and root elongation of cv. Omid failed to respond significantly with these two strains. This may be due to incompatible host-strain combination. Thus compatible strains are necessary for increasing of proton efflux and root extension in wheat cultivars.  相似文献   

9.
We report here significant phenotypic and genetic differences between Azospirillum brasilense Sp7 and spontaneous mutant Sp7-S and their related properties in association with wheat. In contrast to the wild-type strain of Sp7, colonies of Sp7-S stained weakly with Congo red when grown on agar media containing the dye and did not flocculate in the presence of fructose and nitrate. Scanning and transmission electron micrographs showed clearly that the Sp7-S strain lacked surface materials present as a thick layer on the surface of the wild-type Sp7 strain. Different patterns of colonization on wheat roots between Sp7 and Sp7-S, revealed by in situ studies using nifA-lacZ as a reporter gene, were related to a large increase in nitrogenase activity (acetylene reduction) with Sp7-S in association with normal and 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid-treated wheat for assays conducted under conditions in which the nitrogenase activity of free-living Azospirillum organisms was inhibited by an excess of oxygen. Randomly amplified polymorphic DNA analysis indicated the close genetic relationship of Sp7-S to several other sources of Sp7, by comparison to other recognized strains of A. brasilense. Genetic complementation of Sp7-S was achieved with a 9.4-kb fragment of DNA cloned from wild-type Sp7, restoring Congo red staining and flocculation.  相似文献   

10.
For Azospirillum brasilense Sp7, the energy transformation efficiencies were measured in anaerobic respirations with either nitrate, nitrite or nitrous oxide as respiratory electron acceptors by determining the maximal molar growth yields and the H+-translocations using the oxidant pulse method. In continuous cultures grown with malate limiting, the maximal molar growth yields (Y s max -values) were essentially the same with O2 or N2O but were 1/3 and 2/3 lower with NO 2 - or NO 3 - , respectively, as respiratory electron acceptors. Both the maximal molar growth yields and the maintenance energy coefficients were surprisingly high when Azospirillum was grown with nitrite as the sole electron acceptor and source for N-assimilation. Growth under N2-fixing conditions drastically reduced the Y s max -values in the N2O and O2-respiring cells. In the H+-translocation measurements, the /oxidant ratios were 5.6 for O2→H2O, 2.5–2.8 for NO 3 - →NO 2 - , 2.2 for NO 2 - →N2O and 3.1 for N2O→N2 respirations when the cells were preincubated with valinomycin and K+. All the values were enhanced when the experiments were performed with valinomycin plus methyltriphenylphosphonium (=TPMP+) cation. The uncoupler carbonyl cyanide-m-chlorophenyl-hydrazone diminished the H+-excretion indicating that this translocation was due to vectorial flow across the membrane. In the absence of any ionophore, nitrate and nitrite respirations were accompanied by a H+-uptake . Any significant H+-translocation could not be detected in N2O- and O2-respirations under these conditions. It is concluded that nitrate reduction proceeds inside the cytoplasmic membrane, whereas nitrite is reduced extramembraneously. The data are not conclusive for the location of nitrous oxide reductase. The maximal molar growth yield determinations and the absence of any H+-uptake in untreated cells indicate a cytoplasmic orientation of the enzyme similar to the terminal cytochrome oxidase of respiration. The low H+-extrusion values for N2O-respiration compared to O2-respiration in cells treated with valinomycin plus TPMP+ are, however, not in accord with such an interpretation.  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.
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   

13.
Summary A cluster of four Azospirillum brasilense histidine biosynthetic genes, hisA, hisB, hisF and hisH, was identified on a 4.5 kb DNA fragment and its organization studied by complementation analysis of Escherichia coli mutations and nucleotide sequence. The nucleotide sequence of a 1.3 kb fragment that complemented the E. coli hisB mutation was determined and an ORF of 624 nucleotides which can code for a protein of 207 amino acids was identified. A significant base sequence homology with the carboxyterminal moiety of the E. coli hisB gene (0.53) and the Saccharomyces cerevisiae HIS3 gene (0.44), coding for an imidazole glycerolphosphate dehydratase activity was found. The amino acid sequence and composition, the hydropathic profile and the predicted secondary structures of the yeast, E. coli and A. brasilense proteins were compared. The significance of the data presented is discussed.Abbreviations IGP imidazole glycerolphosphate - HP histidinolphosphate  相似文献   

14.
Summary Three new Tn5-mutagenized nif genes of Azospirillum brasilense were characterized. The sizes of the restriction fragments and the restriction maps of the cloned nif DNA regions showed that these nif genes are distinct from those reported earlier, e.g. nifHDK, nifE, nifUS, fixABC. The Nif27 mutant was identified as a nifA type regulatory gene of A. brasilense (a) by genetic complementation with nifA of Klebsiella pneumoniae, (b) by the absence of nitrogenase iron protein in western protein blots and (c) by its inability to activate expression of a nijH-lacZ fusion. The growth characteristics of the three mutants showed that none of them is defective in general nitrogen regulatory (ntr) genes. Also, no homology was detected between the three nif DNA regions of the mutants, cloned in pMS188, pMS189 and pMS197, and the K. pneumoniae nif, gInA or ntr genes. In addition, the fixABC genes of Bradyrhizobium japonicum did not show any hybridization with the cloned Azospirillum genes. Unlike the situation in enteric bacteria, the nif genes in A. brasilense are scattered and span a region of about 65 kb.  相似文献   

15.
Azospirillum species are free-living nitrogen-fixing bacteria commonly found in soil and in association with roots of different plant species. For their capacity to stimulate growth they are known as plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB). In this work, we demonstrate the natural occurrence and colonization of different parts of strawberry plants by Azospirillum brasilense in the cropping area of Tucumán, Argentina. Although bacteria isolations were carried out from two strawberry cultivars, e.g., Camarosa and Pájaro, attempts were successful only with the cultivar Camarosa. Whereas different strains of Azospirillum were isolated from the root surface and inner tissues of roots and stolons of the cultivar Camarosa, we have not obtained Azospirillum isolates from the cultivar Pájaro. After microbiological and molecular characterization (ARDRA) we determined that the isolates belonged to the species A. brasilense. All isolates showed to have the capacity to fix nitrogen, to produce siderophores and indoles. Local isolates exhibited different yields of indoles production when growing in N-free NFb semisolid media supplemented or not with tryptophan (0.1 mg ml−1). This is the first report on the natural occurrence of A. brasilense in strawberry plants, especially colonizing inner tissues of stolons, as well as roots. The local isolates showed three important characteristics within the PGPB group: N2-fixation, siderophores, and indoles production.  相似文献   

16.
The production of vitamins by Azospirillum brasilense was studied in chemically-defined media amended with malate, gluconate and fructose. The liberation of vitamins was significantly affected by the presence of different carbon sources and the age of the culture. Thiamine, niacin and pantothenic acid were produced in large amounts. Thiamine and riboflavin were produced only in culture containing malate or fructose. Biotin was not detected in the supernatants of the culture media.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The possible involvement of IAA in the effect thatAzospirillum brasilense has on the elongation and morphology ofPanicum miliaceum roots was examined by comparing in a Petri dish system the effects of inoculation with a wild strain (Cd) with those of an IAA-overproducing mutant (FT-326). Both bacterial strains produced IAA in culture in the absence of tryptophan. At the stationary growth phase, production of IAA by FT-326 wasca. 12 times greater than that of Cd. When inoculation was made with bacterial concentrations higher than, 106 colony forming units ml–1 (CFU ml–1), both strains inhibited root elongation to the same extent. At lower concentrations Cd enhanced elongation, by 15–20%, while FT-326 was ineffective. Both strains promoted root-hair development, and root-hairs were produced nearer the root tip the higher the bacterial concentration (e. g. root elongation region was reduced). Effects of FT-326 on root-hair development were greater than those of Cd. Acidified ether extracts of Cd and FT-326 cultures had inhibitory or promoting effects on root elongation depending on the dilution applied. At low dilutions, extracts from FT-326 were more inhibitory for elongation than those from Cd. At higher dilutions root elongation was promoted, but FT-326 extracts had to be more diluted than those from Cd. Dilutions that promoted root elongation contained supra-optimal concentrations of IAA, 1–3 orders of magnitude higher than those required for optimal enhancement by synthetic IAA. It is suggested that the bacteria produce in culture an IAA-antagonist or growth inhibitor that decreases the effectiveness of IAA action. The large variability reported for the effects ofAzospirillum on root elongation could be the result of the opposite effects on root elongation of IAA and other compounds, produced by the bacteria.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Application of a peat-based powder inoculant of Azospirillum brasilense, as well as a granular inoculant (each containing 0.5–1.0×107 Azospirillum/g moist peat), in the seed furrows of Zea mays resulted in significantly increased yields (11 to 14%) in light soils at low rates of N fertilization. In general, there was no effect of inoculation on plant yields in heavier soils nor when N fertilization was high. Pre-emergence application of granular inoculant and inoculation associated with irrigation were more efficient in increasing yield than inoculation post-emergence or seed coating.E. Fallik is with ARO-The Volcani Centre, Department of Postharvest Science of Fresh Produce, Bet-Dagan 50250, Israel. Y. Okon is with The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Faculty of Agriculture, Department of Plant Pathology and Microbiology, Rehovot 76100, Israel  相似文献   

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