Phenazine‐1‐carboxylic acid and soil moisture influence biofilm development and turnover of rhizobacterial biomass on wheat root surfaces
Autor: | Melissa K. LeTourneau, James B. Harsh, David M. Weller, John B. Cliff, Matthew J. Marshall, Linda S. Thomashow, S. Indira Devi, Alice Dohnalkova, Olga V. Mavrodi, Robert F. Bonsall, Dmitri V. Mavrodi |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
030106 microbiology urologic and male genital diseases Rhizobacteria Plant Roots Microbiology Soil 03 medical and health sciences Pseudomonas Biomass Nitrogen cycle Soil Microbiology Triticum Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics Soil health Rhizosphere biology Biofilm Soil chemistry biology.organism_classification Pseudomonas synxantha Agronomy Biofilms Phenazines Soil microbiology |
Zdroj: | Environmental Microbiology. 20:2178-2194 |
ISSN: | 1462-2920 1462-2912 |
DOI: | 10.1111/1462-2920.14244 |
Popis: | Phenazine-1-carboxylic acid (PCA) is produced by rhizobacteria in dryland but not in irrigated wheat fields of the Pacific Northwest, USA. PCA promotes biofilm development in bacterial cultures and bacterial colonization of wheat rhizospheres. However, its impact upon biofilm development has not been demonstrated in the rhizosphere, where biofilms influence terrestrial carbon and nitrogen cycles with ramifications for crop and soil health. Furthermore, the relationships between soil moisture and the rates of PCA biosynthesis and degradation have not been established. In this study, expression of PCA biosynthesis genes was upregulated relative to background transcription, and persistence of PCA was slightly decreased in dryland relative to irrigated wheat rhizospheres. Biofilms in dryland rhizospheres inoculated with the PCA-producing (PCA+ ) strain Pseudomonas synxantha 2-79RN10 were more robust than those in rhizospheres inoculated with an isogenic PCA-deficient (PCA- ) mutant strain. This trend was reversed in irrigated rhizospheres. In dryland PCA+ rhizospheres, the turnover of 15 N-labelled rhizobacterial biomass was slower than in the PCA- and irrigated PCA+ treatments, and incorporation of bacterial 15 N into root cell walls was observed in multiple treatments. These results indicate that PCA promotes biofilm development in dryland rhizospheres, and likely influences crop nutrition and soil health in dryland wheat fields. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |