| Literature DB >> 26537605 |
Rocheli de Souza1, Adriana Ambrosini1, Luciane M P Passaglia1.
Abstract
Plant-microbe interactions in the rhizosphere are the determinants of plant health, productivity and soil fertility. Plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB) are bacteria that can enhance plant growth and protect plants from disease and abiotic stresses through a wide variety of mechanisms; those that establish close associations with plants, such as the endophytes, could be more successful in plant growth promotion. Several important bacterial characteristics, such as biological nitrogen fixation, phosphate solubilization, ACC deaminase activity, and production of siderophores and phytohormones, can be assessed as plant growth promotion (PGP) traits. Bacterial inoculants can contribute to increase agronomic efficiency by reducing production costs and environmental pollution, once the use of chemical fertilizers can be reduced or eliminated if the inoculants are efficient. For bacterial inoculants to obtain success in improving plant growth and productivity, several processes involved can influence the efficiency of inoculation, as for example the exudation by plant roots, the bacterial colonization in the roots, and soil health. This review presents an overview of the importance of soil-plant-microbe interactions to the development of efficient inoculants, once PGPB are extensively studied microorganisms, representing a very diverse group of easily accessible beneficial bacteria.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26537605 PMCID: PMC4763327 DOI: 10.1590/S1415-475738420150053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Mol Biol ISSN: 1415-4757 Impact factor: 1.771
Figure 1Rhizosphere/bacteria interactions. A) Different types of association between plant roots and beneficial soil bacteria; B) After colonization or association with roots and/or rhizosphere, bacteria can benefit the plant by (i) tolerance toward abiotic stress through action of ACC deaminase; (ii) defense against pathogens by the presence of competitive traits such as siderophore production; (iii) increase of fertility and plant growth through biological nitrogen fixation (BNF), IAA (indole-3-acetic acid) production, and phosphate solubilization around roots.
Examples of PGPB used as inoculants or bacterial culture of different plant species in soil experiments.
| Plant | Experimental conditions | Microorganism (s) | Main PGP-traits | Main results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chickpea | Field: liquid culture applied to seed |
| N2-fixing (C-2/2), P-solubilizing (PS06) | Plants inoculated with C-2/2, in single or dual inoculation, produced higher nodule fresh weight, nodule number and shoot N content, while PS06 had no significant effect on plant growth. However, the co-inoculation ranked highest in seed yield and nodule fresh weight. |
|
| Pot and field: liquid culture applied to seed |
| N2-fixing
( | In the field, all the combined
treatments containing |
| |
| Maize | Pot: liquid culture applied to seed or soil |
| Siderophore, antifungal activity | The inoculation method influenced the plant growth: seed-applied liquid culture promoted increase on shoot fresh weight as the control, while soil-applied liquid culture reduced plant growth markedly. |
|
| Pot: liquid culture applied to seed |
| N2-fixing, antifungal activity (BcP26 and MbP18), IAA (PsA15 and MbP18) | Bacterial inoculation had a much better stimulatory effect on plant growth and NPK content in nutrient-deficient soil than in nutrient-rich soil, where the bacterial inoculants stimulated only root growth and N, K uptake of the roots. |
| |
| Pot and field: liquid inoculant applied to seed |
| N2-fixing, IAA | In pot trials with clay soil, plant growth was increased when Ab-V5 was applied at full dose. In sandy soil, nutrients and Ab-V5 were needed for a significant increase in the maize response. In the field, the grain production was increased when Ab-V5 and N were added, compared to N fertilization alone. |
| |
| Pea | Field: peat powder, granular, and liquid inoculant applied to seed or soil |
| N2-fixing | The effects of inoculant formulation on nodule number, N accumulation and N2-fixation were: granular peat powder liquid = uninoculated. Soil-applied inoculant improved N nutrition of field pea compared to seed-applied inoculation, with or without applied urea-N. |
|
| Pot: liquid culture applied to seed |
| ACC-deaminase | Rhizobacteria containing ACC-deaminase significantly decreased the “drought stress-imposed effects”, although with variable efficacy at different moisture levels. Strain ACC-5 greatly improved the water use efficiency at lowest soil moisture level. |
| |
| Peanut | Pot and field: liquid culture applied to seed |
| ACC-deaminase, IAA, siderophore, antifungal activity | Pod yield and NP contents in soil, shoot and kernel were significantly enhanced in treatments inoculated in pots, during rainy and post-rainy seasons. The PGPRs also significantly enhanced pod yield, haulm yield and nodule dry weight compared to controls, in 3 years of field trials. |
|
| Rice | Field: peat inoculant applied to soil and seedling |
| Not described | Inoculation significantly increased grain and straw yields and total N uptake, as well as grain quality in terms of N percentage. Inoculation was able to save 43 kg N ha−1, with an additional rice yield of 270 kg ha−1 in two consecutive rainy seasons at the experimental site. |
|
| Pot and field: liquid culture applied to seedling |
| N2-fixing, IAA | The field experiment indicated that inoculation with B510 increases tiller number, resulting in an increase in seed yield at commercial levels when compared with uninoculated plants. |
| |
| Field: liquid culture applied to seedling |
| N2-fixing, IAA | Growth in terms of tiller numbers and
shoot length was significantly increased by inoculation. The application of
|
| |
| Soybean | Field: granular and peat inoculant applied to seed and in-furrow |
| Not described | The inoculation with UW85 resulted in
stimulations in shoot dry weight, increased seed yield and seed N content,
but the effect was site-specific. The stimulation in growth and N parameters
by UW85 treatment was proportionally greater in the absence of |
|
| Field: liquid inoculant applied to seed and in-furrow |
| N2-fixing, IAA | Inoculation of seeds with rhizobia
increased soybean yield by 8.4 %, and co-inoculation with |
| |
| Pot: liquid culture applied to seed |
| Siderophore, IAA, ACC-deaminase, antifungal activity, phytases | Inoculation significantly increased rhizosphere soil properties (enzyme activities, IAA production, microbial respiration, microbial biomass-C), and nutrient content in straw and seeds of soybean compared to uninoculated control. |
| |
| Sugarcane | Pot and field: liquid culture applied to seedlings |
| N2-fixing | Biomass increase due to MG43 inoculation reached 20% in the field. The inoculation of three strains was less effective than inoculation by a single MG43 suspension. |
|
| Field: liquid culture applied to stem cuttings |
| N2-fixing, siderophore, IAA, P-solubilizing | The strain showed a significant increase in the number of sets germinated, in the amount of soluble solids, and in the yield of sugarcane juice compared to control. |
| |
| Wheat | Field: liquid inoculant applied to seed |
| N2-fixing, IAA | The inoculated crops exhibited more vigorous vegetative growth, with both greater shoot and root dry matter accumulation. Positive responses were found in about 70% of the experimental sites (total: 297 sites), independently of fertilization and other crop and soil management practices. |
|
| Pot: liquid culture applied to soil |
| IAA, P-solubilizing | Sodium content was reduced under co-inoculation conditions but not after single inoculation with either strain or in the control. Plants grown under different salinity regimes and PGPR co-inoculation showed an increase in dry biomass, total soluble sugars and proline content, and reduced activity of antioxidant enzymes. |
| |
| Wheat and maize | Field: peat and liquid inoculant applied to seed |
| N2-fixing, IAA | Inoculants increased maize and wheat yields at low N fertilizer starter at sowing by 27% and 31%, respectively. A liquid inoculant containing a combination of the strains proved to be as effective as peat inoculant carrying the same strains, in both maize and wheat. |
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Cicer arietinum L.
Arachis hypogaea L.
When the characteristic is not displayed by all strains, those that present it are shown in parenthesis.