| Literature DB >> 26858542 |
Ashraf Y Z Khalifa1, Abdel-Moneium Alsyeeh2, Mohammed A Almalki2, Farag A Saleh3.
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to characterize the endophytic bacterial strain designated MSR1 that was isolated from inside the non-nodulating roots of Medicago sativa after surface-sterilization. MSR1 was identified as Enterobacter cloacae using both 16S rDNA gene sequence analysis and API20E biochemical identification system (Biomerieux, France). Furthermore, this bacterium was characterized using API50CH kit (Biomerieux, France) and tested for antibacterial activities against some food borne pathogens. The results showed that E. cloacae consumed certain carbohydrates such as glycerol, d-xylose, d-maltose and esculin melibiose as a sole carbon source and certain amino acids such as arginine, tryptophan ornithine as nitrogen source. Furthermore, MSR1 possessed multiple plant-growth promoting characteristics; phosphate solubility, production of phytohormones acetoin and bioactive compounds. Inoculation of Pisum sativum with MSR1 significantly improved the growth parameters (the length and dry weight) of this economically important grain legume compared to the non-treated plants. To our knowledge, this is the first report addressing E. cloacae which exist in roots of alfalfa growing in Al-Ahsaa region. The results confirmed that E. cloacae exhibited traits for plant growth promoting and could be developed as an eco-friendly biofertilizer for P. sativum and probably for other important plant species in future.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial endophytes; Enterobacter cloacae; Pisum sativum
Year: 2015 PMID: 26858542 PMCID: PMC4705252 DOI: 10.1016/j.sjbs.2015.06.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Saudi J Biol Sci ISSN: 1319-562X Impact factor: 4.219
Characteristics of strain MSR1.
| Characteristic | Result |
|---|---|
| Colony morphology | Rounded colony-entire edge |
| Pigmentation | White (yellowish) |
| Gram staining | Negative |
| Cells | Rod-shaped |
| NaCl tolerance (0–4%) | + |
| NaCl tolerance (5%) | − |
| ONPG | + |
| Arginine | + |
| Lysine | − |
| Ornithine | + |
| Citrate utilization | + |
| H2S production | − |
| Urea hydrolysis | − |
| Tryptophan | + |
| Indole production | + |
| Acetoin production | + |
| Charcoal gelatin | − |
| Glucose | + |
| Mannitol | + |
| Inositol | − |
| Sorbitol | + |
| Rhamnose | + |
| Sucrose | + |
| Melibiose | + |
| Amygdalin | + |
| Arabinose | + |
| Glycerol | + |
| + | |
| + | |
| Esculin | + |
| Methyl-α | + |
| Catalase | + |
| Amylase | + |
| Phosphate solubilization | + |
| IAA production (μg ml−1) | 112 ± 6 |
| Antibacterial activity | |
| | + |
| | − |
| | − |
| | − |
| | − |
| | − |
| Antibiotic resistance (R)/susceptibility (S) (mcg disc−1) | |
| Chloramphenicol 30 | S (1.8 |
| Cephradine 30 | R |
| Ampicillin sulbactam 10 | R |
| Erythromycin 15 | R |
| Tetracycline 30 | R |
| 16S r RNA gene sequence | 99% identity to |
| NCBI gene bank accession No. | KJ668861 |
Diameter of inhibition zone around the antibiotic disc.
16S rRNA gene sequence analysis and phylogenetic tree.
| Bacterial strain | Accession No. | Coverage % | Identity % |
|---|---|---|---|
| CP001918 | 99 | 99 | |
| (HE978272) | 99 | 99 | |
| (JN644526) | 99 | 99 | |
| (JQ640581) | 99 | 99 | |
| EF059865) | 99 | 99 | |
| (FJ188300) | 81 | 79 |
Figure 1Neighbor-joining tree based on 16S rDNA gene sequences showing relationships between strain MSR1 (accession No. KJ668861) and related species Enterobacter cloacae subsp. cloacae ATCC 13047 (accession No. CP001918), Enterobacter cloacae subsp. cloacae strain DSM 30054T (accession No. HE978272), Enterobacter cloacae strain 5621A (accession No. JN644526), Enterobacter cloacae strain AB6 (accession No. JQ640581), Enterobacter cloacae strain E717 (accession No. EF059865) and Bacillus firmus strain UST981101-006 (accession No. FJ188300). The percentage numbers above each branch indicate the 567 levels of bootstrap support (>50%) for the branch point based on 1.,500 568 resamplings. The bar represents 0.02 substitutions per site.
Figure 2Effects of MSR1 inoculation on length of root and shoot of Pisum sativum.
Figure 3Effects of MSR1 inoculation on dry weights of root and shoot of Pisum sativum.