| Literature DB >> 36015422 |
Anna Timofeeva1, Maria Galyamova2, Sergey Sedykh1,2.
Abstract
Phosphates are known to be essential for plant growth and development, with phosphorus compounds being involved in various physiological and biochemical reactions. Phosphates are known as one of the most important factors limiting crop yields. The problem of phosphorus deficiency in the soil has traditionally been solved by applying phosphate fertilizers. However, chemical phosphate fertilizers are considered ineffective compared to the organic fertilizers manure and compost. Therefore, increasing the bioavailability of phosphates for plants is one of the primary goals of sustainable agriculture. Phosphate-solubilizing soil microorganisms can make soil-insoluble phosphate bioavailable for plants through solubilization and mineralization. These microorganisms are currently in the focus of interest due to their advantages, such as environmental friendliness, low cost, and high biological efficiency. In this regard, the solubilization of phosphates by soil microorganisms holds strong potential in research, and inoculation of soils or crops with phosphate-solubilizing bacteria is a promising strategy to improve plant phosphate uptake. In this review, we analyze all the species of phosphate-solubilizing bacteria described in the literature to date. We discuss key mechanisms of solubilization of mineral phosphates and mineralization of organic phosphate-containing compounds: organic acids secreted by bacteria for the mobilization of insoluble inorganic phosphates, and the enzymes hydrolyzing phosphorus-containing organic compounds. We demonstrate that phosphate-solubilizing microorganisms have enormous potency as biofertilizers since they increase phosphorus bioavailability for the plant, promote sustainable agriculture, improve soil fertility, and raise crop yields. The use of phosphate-solubilizing microbes is regarded as a new frontier in increasing plant productivity.Entities:
Keywords: biofertilizer; nitrogen fixation; phosphate fertilizers; phosphate solubilization; soil bacteria; soil microbiome; sustainable agriculture
Year: 2022 PMID: 36015422 PMCID: PMC9414882 DOI: 10.3390/plants11162119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Genera of soil phosphate-solubilizing bacteria and fungi.
| Bacteria | Fungi | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Genera | Ref. | Genera | Ref. |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ |
| [ |
|
| [ | ||
|
| [ | ||
|
| [ | ||
|
| [ | ||
|
| [ | ||
|
| [ | ||
|
| [ | ||
|
| [ | ||
Figure 1Role of PSBs in the solubilization of phosphates: solubilization of inorganic phosphates due to the synthesis of organic and inorganic acids; NH4+-excretion; solubilization of organic phosphorus-containing compounds due to the synthesis and excretion of enzymes; synthesis of polysaccharides, cytokinins, and gibberellins.
Important phosphate-solubilizing microorganisms, their ecological niches, and organic acids produced.
| Phosphate-Solubilizing Microorganism | Ecological Niche | Predominantly Produced Acids | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Soil | Lactic | [ |
| Soil | Citric, glycolic, succinic, gluconic, oxalic, lactic | [ | |
| Soil rizoshpere | Lactic, malic | [ | |
| Wheat and cowpea rhizosphere | Lactic, citric | [ | |
| Lateritic soil | Oxalic, succinic, citric, 2-ketogluconic | [ | |
|
| Indian rock phosphate | Oxalic, citric, gluconic, succinic, tartaric | [ |
|
| Wheat rhizosphere | Gluconic | [ |
|
| Wheat rhizosphere | Oxalic, citric | [ |
|
| Mangrove | Lactic, itaconic, isovaleric, isobutyric, acetic | [ |
|
| Venezuelan phosphate rocks | Citric, gluconic acid | [ |
|
| Grass rhizosphere | 2-ketogluconic | [ |
|
| Wheat grains | Oxalic, citric, gluconic, succinic | [ |
|
| Oil palms rhizosphere | Citric, malic, tartaric, gluconic | [ |
|
| Tropical and subtropical soils | Gluconic, oxalic | [ |
|
| Rhizosphere of | Lactic, formic | [ |
| Giant cardon cactus ( | Gluconic, propionic, isovaleric, heptonic, caproic, isocaproic, formic, valeric, succinic, oxalic, oxaloacetic, malonic | [ | |
|
|
| gluconic, oxalic, 2-ketogluconic, lactic, succinic aid, formic, citric, malic | [ |
|
| Gluconic, propionic, isovaleric, formic, succinic, lactic | [ | |
|
| Gluconic, propionic, acetic, formic, succinic, lactic, oxalic | [ |