| Literature DB >> 23449812 |
Dhanushkodi Ramadoss1, Vithal K Lakkineni, Pranita Bose, Sajad Ali, Kannepalli Annapurna.
Abstract
Eighty four halotolerant bacterial strains were isolated from the saline habitats and screened for growth at different NaCl concentrations. All grew well at 5% NaCl, but only 25% isolates showed growth at 20% NaCl concentration. Five strains SL3, SL32, SL35, J8W and PU62 growing well in 20% NaCl concentrations were further characterized for multiple plant growth promoting traits such as indole -3- acetic acid (IAA) production, HCN and siderophore production, ACC deaminase activity and P-solubilization. None were positive for HCN production and PCR amplification of acdS, the structural gene for ACC deaminase enzyme was found negative. 16S rRNA gene sequencing analysis of the five strains showed them to belong to two genera Bacillus and Hallobacillus. In vitro experiments showed that salt concentrations had significant inhibitory effects on development of seedlings but not on the growth of the bacterial strains. Inoculation of the 5 halotolerant bacterial strains to ameliorate salt stress (80 mM, 160 mM and 320 mM) in wheat seedlings produced an increase in root length of 71.7% in comparison with uninoculated positive controls. In particular, Hallobacillus sp. SL3 and Bacillus halodenitrificans PU62 showed more than 90% increase in root elongation and 17.4% increase in dry weight when compared to uninoculated wheat seedlings at 320 mM NaCl stress indicating a significant reduction of the deleterious effects of NaCl. These results indicate that halotolerant bacteria isolated from saline environments have potential to enhance plant growth under saline stress through direct or indirect mechanisms and would be most appropriate as bioinoculants under such conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Halotolerant bacteria; Plant growth promoting bacteria; Salt stress; Wheat
Year: 2013 PMID: 23449812 PMCID: PMC3579424 DOI: 10.1186/2193-1801-2-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Figure 1Growth curve of selected isolates at different NaCl concentration. The graph shows the maximum growth of each isolates in their respective tolerance levels of NaCl. Each point is the mean of three replicates.
Plant growth promoting traits of halotolerant bacterial isolates and their sequence identity
| Isolate* | IAA production | Siderophore production | Phosphate solubilization | HCN production | GenBank accession number | Best matched identity >99% | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SL 3 | + | + | - | - | - | JX290076 | |
| SL 32 | - | + | - | - | - | JQ361041 | |
| SL 35 | - | - | - | - | - | JQ361042 | |
| J 8 W | + | - | - | - | - | JQ361044 | |
| PU 62 | - | + | + | - | - | JQ361043 |
*Habitats: SL= Sambhar salt lake; J= Jaiselmer saline soil; PU= Pushkar lake.
Figure 2Phylogenetic analysis of partial 16S rDNA sequences from the five selected isolates. Bootstrap analysis was determined and values are shown. The scale bars show two substitution nucleotides per 100 nucleotides. The 16S rDNA of the reference strains were used for the tree construction and the strains mentioned in bold are isolates from this study.
Figure 3PCR amplification ofgene shows no band from selected bacterial isolates along with theas a positive control forgene.
Effect of bacterial inoculation on root length (cm) of wheat under different concentrations of NaCl
| Strainsa | No Salt | 80 mMNaCl | 160 mMNaCl | 320 mMNaCl |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 4.34±0.04b | 4.32±0.09a | 3.30±0.13a | 0.96±0.04a |
| 2 | 3.78±0.06c | 3.81±0.05c | 2.20±0.05d | 0.25±0.02d |
| 3 | 3.45±0.06d | 2.92±0.06d | 2.76±0.07c | 0.57±0.03c |
| 4 | 4.32±0.06b | 4.09±0.05b | 2.87±0.06b | 0.71±0.04b |
| 5 | 4.77±0.06a | 4.42±0.06a | 2.95±0.05b | 0.89±0.03a |
| Control | 3.71±0.03c | 2.39±0.04c | 0.52±0.03c | 0.0e |
Strains: 1, Halobacillus sp SL3; 2, Bacillus pumilus SL32; 3, Bacillus sp SL35; 4, Bacillus sp J8W; 5, Bacillus halodenitrificans PU62. *Values (mean ± SD * r=2) with the same letters are not significantly different at p ≤ 0.05. Control, sterile water. Values are mean of 50 seeds for each treatment in two independent experiments.
Effects of bacterial inoculation on root dry weight (g) of wheat under different concentrations of NaCl
| Strains | No Salt | 80 mMNaCl | 160 mMNaCl | 320 mMNaCl |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0.593±0.016b | 0.585±0.01a | 0.39±0.007a | 0.197±0.014a |
| 2 | 0.527±0.019a | 0.437±0.022b | 0.277±0.012b | 0.117±0.016c |
| 3 | 0.54±0.023a | 0.475±0.031b | 0.327±0.031b | 0.127±0.016c |
| 4 | 0.591±0.011a | 0.577±0.024a | 0.387±0.08a | 0.18±0.009ab |
| 5 | 0.635±0.023a | 0.612±0.02a | 0.387±0.08a | 0.15±0.012bc |
| Control | 0.44±0.012b | 0.39±0.01c | 0.22±0.01c | 0.0d |
Strains: 1, Halobacillus sp SL3; 2, Bacillus pumilus SL32; 3, Bacillus sp SL35; 4, Bacillus sp J8W; 5, Bacillus halodenitrificans PU62. *Values (mean ± SD * r=2) with the same letters are not significantly different at p ≤ 0.05. Control, sterile water. Values are mean of 50 seeds for each treatment in two independent experiments.
Figure 4Effects of bacterial inoculation on germination percentage of wheat seedlings at 80 mM, 160 mM and 320 mM NaCl concentration along with control (sterilized water). Values are mean of two independent experiments of 50 seeds for each treatment.