| Literature DB >> 28324544 |
Subramaniam Gopalakrishnan1, Arumugam Sathya1, Rajendran Vijayabharathi1, Rajeev Kumar Varshney1, C L Laxmipathi Gowda1, Lakshmanan Krishnamurthy2.
Abstract
Modern agriculture faces challenges, such as loss of soil fertility, fluctuating climatic factors and increasing pathogen and pest attacks. Sustainability and environmental safety of agricultural production relies on eco-friendly approaches like biofertilizers, biopesticides and crop residue return. The multiplicity of beneficial effects of microbial inoculants, particularly plant growth promoters (PGP), emphasizes the need for further strengthening the research and their use in modern agriculture. PGP inhabit the rhizosphere for nutrients from plant root exudates. By reaction, they help in (1) increased plant growth through soil nutrient enrichment by nitrogen fixation, phosphate solubilization, siderophore production and phytohormones production (2) increased plant protection by influencing cellulase, protease, lipase and β-1,3 glucanase productions and enhance plant defense by triggering induced systemic resistance through lipopolysaccharides, flagella, homoserine lactones, acetoin and butanediol against pests and pathogens. In addition, the PGP microbes contain useful variation for tolerating abiotic stresses like extremes of temperature, pH, salinity and drought; heavy metal and pesticide pollution. Seeking such tolerant PGP microbes is expected to offer enhanced plant growth and yield even under a combination of stresses. This review summarizes the PGP related research and its benefits, and highlights the benefits of PGP rhizobia belonging to the family Rhizobiaceae, Phyllobacteriaceae and Bradyrhizobiaceae.Entities:
Keywords: Biocontrol; Co-inoculation; Heavymetal; PGPR; Rhizobium; Stress
Year: 2014 PMID: 28324544 PMCID: PMC4522733 DOI: 10.1007/s13205-014-0241-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: 3 Biotech ISSN: 2190-5738 Impact factor: 2.406
Rhizobia and their ability in plant growth promotion (Modified from Ahmed and Kibert, 2014)
| Rhizobia | Growth promoting substances produced | References |
|---|---|---|
|
| Siderophores, P-solubilization, IAA, HCN | Abd-Alla ( |
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| Growth hormones, IAA, siderophores, HCN, ammonia, exo-polysaccharides | Ahemad and Khan ( |
| IAA Siderophores Siderophores Cytokinin | Arora et al. ( |
|
| Siderophores, IAA, HCN, P-solubilization | Abd-Alla ( |
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| IAA, HCN, ammonia, siderophores, exo-polysaccharides | Ahemad and Khan ( |
|
| IAA, Siderophores | Shaharoona et al. ( |
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| IAA, Siderophores, HCN, Ammonia, exo-polysaccharides, antifungal activity, | Ahemad and Khan ( |
|
| IAA, Siderophores | Wani et al. ( |
Attributes of rhizobia exerted against abiotic stress on host plants/in vitro
| Rhizobia | Crop species | Screening medium | Growth condition | Remarks | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drought stress | ||||||
|
| Kidney bean | −7, −70 and <−85 kPa | Greenhouse | Enhanced plant height, shoot dry weight and nodule number | Figueiredo et al. ( | |
|
| – | PEG 6000 induced | In vitro and pot culture | Enhanced drought tolerance, IAA and EPS production; nodulation, nodule ARA, nodule N | Uma et al. ( | |
|
| Chickpea | – | Field study | Increased nodule number, shoot dry weight and grain yield Water deficient tolerant strains were also NaCl tolerant. | Romdhane et al. ( | |
|
| Kidney bean | – | Pot studies | Enhanced nodules, nitrogenase activity and biomass production Higher tolerance than wild type strains | Suárez et al. ( | |
| Temperature stress | ||||||
|
| – | 20, 28 and 37 °C | In vitro | Overproduction of 60 kDa protein by all the isolates All the isolates revealed more tolerance to 20 °C than 37 °C. | Rodrigues et al. ( | |
| Heat shock at 60 °C for 15 min; 46 °C for 3 h | In vitro | Variations in the expression of protein profile | ||||
|
| – | 5 °C | In vitro | Induction of 135 and 119 kDa proteins Variation in the protein profile of stressed and non-stressed cells | Sardesai and Babu ( | |
| Salt/osmotic stress | ||||||
|
| Chickpea -salt resistant and sensitive cultivars | 50, 75, 100 mM | In vitro | Decreased plant dry weight, nitrogenase activity in sensitive cultivars Less N2 fixation inhibition, higher root to shoot ratio, normalized nodule weight and shoot K/Na ratio and reduced foliar accumulation of Na + in resistant cultivars | Tejera et al. ( | |
|
| – | 100–400 mmol NaCl/L | In vitro | Higher tolerance was noticed on 200 mmol/L Altered protein and LPS levels Higher proline accumulation than glutamate | Soussi et al. ( | |
(40 strains) | – | 0.4-1.4 M NaCl | In vitro | Presence of small and large plasmids Intracellular accumulation of free glutamate Three rhizobia strains has tolerated 1.4 M NaCl | Gal and Choi ( | |
|
| Chickpea | 25 mM NaCl | Glasshouse | M. ciceri enhanced the nodulation and CAT activity Least decrease in nodule protein and SOD activity | Mhadhbi et al. ( | |
| Rhizobia strains | Lentil | 5.5 Ds m−1 | Field study | Increased plant biomass, nodule number and nodule dry weight | Islam et al. ( | |
|
| Chickpea | Mannitol—50 mM induced | Aerated hydroponic cultures | Maintenance of growth and nitrogen fixing activity Increased antioxidant enzyme activity in nodules | Mhadhbi et al. ( | |
| pH stress | ||||||
|
| – | 5, 7 and 9 | In vitro | Large range of isolate variation in growth at pH 7/9 and others at pH 5/7 | Rodrigues et al. ( | |
Rhizobia and their effects on host plant/in vitro at metal stress conditions
| Rhizobia | Crop species | Heavy metal stress | Growth condition | Remarks | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| – | Cd | In vitro | Sequestration of Cd | Robinson et al. ( |
|
| Green gram | Ni, Zn | Pot experiments | Enhanced growth performance | Wani et al. ( |
|
| Hyacinth bean | Co, Cu, Zn, Cd | Pot experiments and field conditions | Greater HM accumulation in nodules than in roots and shoots | Younis ( |
|
| Chickpea | Cr | Pot experiments | Increased growth, nodulation, chlorophyll, leghaemoglobin, nitrogen content, seed protein and seed yield | Wani et al. ( |
|
| – | Cd, Zn | In vitro | Heavy metal resistance | Vidal et al. ( |
|
| Maize | Pb | Pot experiments | Enhanced plant growth and biomass | Hadi and Bano ( |
|
| Black medic | Cu | Pot experiments | Enhanced biomass production | Fan et al. ( |
|
| Lentil | Pb, Ni | Pot experiments | Increased growth, nodulation, chlorophyll, leghaemoglobin, nitrogen, seed protein and seed yield | Wani and Khan ( |
Rhizobia and their beneficial attributes exerted on host plant/in vitro at pesticide stress conditions
| Rhizobia | Crop species | Pesticides | Concentrations | Condition | Remarks | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Pea Lentil Chickpea | Quizalafop-p-ethyl | 40, 80 and 120 µg/kg soil | Pot experiments | Enhanced biomass, nodulation, leghaemoglobin content, root and shoot N, root and shoot P, seed yield and seed protein | Ahemad and Khan ( |
| Clodinafop | 400, 800 and 1,200 µg/kg soil | |||||
| – | Metribuzin | 850, 1,700 and 2,550 µg/L | In vitro | Concentration-dependent progressive decline in PGP substances except exo-polysaccharides | Ahemad and Khan ( |
| Glyphosate | 1,444, 2,888 and 4,332 µg/L | |||||
|
| – | Terbuthylazine | 4, 8, 16, 32 and 64 mg/L | In vitro | Growth decline was in the order of Terbuthylazine > Prometryn > Simazine | Singh and Wright ( |
| Simazine | 4.3, 8.6, 17.2, 34.4 and 68.8 mg/L | |||||
| Prometryn | 4, 8, 16, 32 and 64 mg/L | |||||
| Bentazon | 4.1, 8.2, 16.4, 32.8, 65.6 mg/L | No adverse effects on growth | ||||
|
| ||||||
| Chickpea, Pea, Lentil | Fipronil | 200, 400, and 600 mg/kg soil | Pot experiments | Enhanced the biomass, nodulation, leghaemoglobin content, root and shoot N, root and shoot P, seed yield and seed protein | Ahemad and Khan (
|
| Pyriproxyfen | 1,300, 2,600, and 3,900 mg/kg soil | |||||
| – | Imidacloprid | 100, 200 and 300 µg/L | In vitro | Concentration-dependent progressive decline in PGP substances except exo-polysaccharides | Ahemad and Khan ( |
| Thiamethoxam | 25, 50 and 75 µg/L | |||||
|
| ||||||
| – | Hexaconazole | 40, 80 and 120 µg/L | In vitro | Concentration-dependent progressive decline in PGP substances except exo-polysaccharides | Ahemad and Khan ( |
| Metalaxyl | 1,500, 3,000 and 4,500 µg/L | |||||
| Kitazin | 96, 192 and 288 µg/L | |||||
|
| Pea | Tebuconazole | 100, 200 and 300 µg/L | In vitro | Concentration-dependent progressive decline in PGP substances except exo-polysaccharides, HCN and ammonia | Ahemad and Khan ( |
| 100, 200 and 300 µg/kg soil | Pot experiments | Enhanced the biomass, nodulation, leghaemoglobin content, root and shoot N, root and shoot P, seed yield and seed protein | ||||