| Literature DB >> 26361480 |
Yong-Soon Park1, Kyungseok Park2, Joseph W Kloepper3, Choong-Min Ryu4.
Abstract
Certain bacterial species associate with plant roots in soil. The plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) stimulate plant growth and yield in greenhouse and field. Here, we examined whether application of known bacilli PGPR strains stimulated growth and asexual reproduction in the succulent plant Kalanchoe daigremontiana. Four PGPR strains B. amyloliquefaciens IN937a, B. cereus BS107, B. pumilus INR7, and B. subtilis GB03 were applied to young plantlets by soil-drenching, and plant growth and development was monitored for three months. Aerial growth was significantly stimulated in PGPR-inoculated plants, which was observed as increases in plant height, shoot weight, and stem width. The stimulated growth influenced plant development by increasing the total number of leaves per plant. Treatment with bacilli also increased the total root biomass compared with that of control plants, and led to a 2-fold increase in asexual reproduction and plantlet formation on the leaf. Collectively, our results firstly demonstrate that Bacillus spp. promote vegetative development of K. daigremontiana, and the enhanced growth stimulates asexual reproduction and plantlet formation.Entities:
Keywords: Bacillus spp.; Kalanchoe daigremontiana; asexual plant reproduction; plant growth; plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR); rhizosphere
Year: 2015 PMID: 26361480 PMCID: PMC4564157 DOI: 10.5423/PPJ.NT.01.2015.0006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Pathol J ISSN: 1598-2254 Impact factor: 1.795
Fig. 1Representative images of Kalanchoe daigremontiana after inoculation of Bacillus spp. K. daigremontiana seedlings were drenched once a week for the first 3 weeks with suspensions (1 × 108 cfu/ml) of (A) B. amyloliquefaciens IN937a, (B) B. cereus BS107, (C) B. pumilus INR7, and (D) B. subtilis GB03, and grown at 28°C for 90 d. Six biological replicates were used for each application of bacilli (n = 6).
Fig. 2Kalanchoe daigremontiana growth and development is stimulated by inoculation of Bacillus spp. K. daigremontiana seedlings were inoculated with four Bacillus spp. and grown as shown in Fig. 1. (A) Plant height, (B) shoot weight, (C) stem width, and (D) total leaf number per plant were evaluated at 90 d after the bacilli inoculation. Six biological replicates were used for each treatment (n = 6). Error bars indicate standard error of the mean and different letters indicate significant differences between treatments (P = 0.05).
Fig. 3Root biomass production is stimulated by treatment with Bacillus spp. Kalanchoe daigremontiana seedlings were inoculated with four Bacillus spp. and grown as shown in Fig. 1. (A) Representative images of root growth in bacilli-inoculated and control plants. (B) Total root weight was greater in most of bacilli-inoculated plants than in control plants. Six biological replicates were used for each test (n = 6). Error bars indicate standard error of the mean and different letters indicate significant differences between treatments (P = 0.05).
Fig. 4Asexual reproduction in Kalanchoe plants treated with Bacillus spp. K. daigremontiana seedlings were inoculated with four Bacillus spp. as shown.in Fig. 1 and grown for 120 d. (A) Total number of leaves with plantlet development per plant. (B) Total number of plantlets per leaf. Six biological replicates were used for each treatment (n = 6). Error bars indicate standard error of the mean and different letters indicate significant differences between treatments (P = 0.05).
Population density of the introduced bacilli on the Kalanchoe roots
| Treatments | Population density (Log cfu/g fresh root) at days after PGPR inoculation | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Day 0 | Day 5 | Day 10 | |
| IN937a | 6.26 c | 6.40 c | 6.00 c |
| BS107 | 5.41 b | 5.50 b | 5.63 b |
| INR7 | 7.22 d | 7.14 d | 7.21 e |
| GB03 | 6.50 c | 6.43 c | 6.47 d |
| Control | 0.00 a | 0.00 a | 0.00 a |
Numbers represent the mean of five replications per treatment. Bacterial numbers were counted 0, 5 and 10 days after inoculation of B. amyloliquefaciens IN937a, B. cereus BS107, B. pumilus INR7, and B. subtilis GB03 on the roots. To select targeted bacterial population, an antibiotic 100 μg/ml rifampicin was amended in the tryptic soy broth agar. Different letters indicate significant differences using Fisher’s protected LSD test at P=0.05.