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Scientists
Identify Bacteria That Increase Plant Growth
Monday, January 26, 2009
Findings have
implications for increasing biomass for the production of
biofuels
Poplar
plants at 1 (A) and 10 (B) weeks after being treated with
endophytic bacteria (strain S. proteamaculans 568) compared
with control plants. The inoculated plants show increased
root and shoot formation, particularly after 10 weeks.
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Credit:
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Through work originally
designed to remove contaminants from soil, scientists at the U.S.
Department of Energy’s (DOE) Brookhaven National Laboratory
and their Belgium colleagues at Hasselt University have
identified plant-associated microbes that can improve plant
growth on marginal land. The findings, published in the February
1, 2009 issue of Applied and Environmental Microbiology,
may help scientists design strategies for sustainable biofuel
production that do not use food crops or agricultural land.
“Biofuels are receiving
increased attention as one strategy for addressing the dwindling
supplies, high costs, and environmental consequences of fossil
fuels,” said Brookhaven biologist and lead author Daniel
(Niels) van der Lelie, who leads the Lab’s biofuels
research program. “But competition with agricultural
resources is an important socioeconomic concern.”
Ethanol produced by fermenting
corn, for example, diverts an important food source — and
the land it’s grown on — for fuel production. A
better approach would be to use non-food plants, ideally ones
grown on non-agricultural land, for biofuel production.
Van der Lelie’s team has
experience with plants growing on extremely marginal soil —
soil contaminated with heavy metals and other industrial
chemicals. In prior research, his group has incorporated the
molecular “machinery” used by bacteria that degrade
such contaminants into microbes that normally colonize poplar
trees, and used the trees to clean up the soil. An added benefit,
the scientists observed, was that the microbe-supplemented trees
grew faster — even when no contaminants were present.
“This work led to our
current search for bacteria and the metabolic pathways within
them that increase biomass and carbon sequestration in poplar
trees growing on marginal soils, with the goal of further
improving poplar for biofuel production on non-agricultural
lands,” said co-author Safiyh Taghavi. In the current
study, the scientists isolated bacteria normally resident in
poplar and willow roots, which are known as endophytic bacteria,
and tested selected strains’ abilities to increase poplar
growth in a controlled greenhouse environment. They also
sequenced the genes from four selected bacterial species and
screened them for the production of plant-growth promoting
enzymes, hormones, and other metabolic factors that might help
explain how the bacteria improve plant growth.
“Understanding such
microbial-plant interactions may yield ways to further increase
biomass,” van der Lelie said.
The plants were first washed
and surface-sterilized to eliminate the presence of soil bacteria
so the scientists could study only the bacteria that lived within
the plant tissues – true endophytic bacteria. The plant
material was then ground up so the bacterial species could be
isolated. Individual strains were then supplemented with a gene
for a protein that “glows” under ultraviolet light,
and inoculated into the roots of fresh poplar cuttings that had
been developing new roots in water. The presence of the
endophytic bacteria was confirmed by searching for the glowing
protein. Some bacterial species were also tested for their
ability to increase the production of roots in the poplar
cuttings by being introduced during the rooting process rather
than afterward.
The
results:
The scientists identified 78
bacterial endophytes from poplar and willow. Some species had
beneficial effects on plant growth, others had no effect, and
some resulted in decreased growth. In particular, poplar cuttings
inoculated with Enterobacter sp. 638 and Burkholderia
cepacia BU72 repeatedly showed the highest increase in
biomass production — up to 50 percent — as compared
with non-inoculated control plants. Though no other endophyte
species showed such dramatic effects, some were effective in
promoting growth in particular cultivars of poplar.
In the studies specifically
looking at root formation, non-inoculated plants formed roots
very slowly. In contrast, plant cuttings that were allowed to
root in the presence of selected endophytes grew roots and shoots
more quickly.
The analysis of genes and
metabolically important gene products from endophytes resulted in
the identification of many possible mechanisms that could help
these microbes thrive within a plant environment, and potentially
affect the growth and development of their plant host. These
include the production of plant-growth-promoting hormones by the
endophytic bacteria that stimulate the growth of poplar on
marginal soils.
The scientists plan to conduct
additional studies to further elucidate these mechanisms. “These
mechanisms are of prime importance for the use of plants as
feedstocks for biofuels and for carbon sequestration through
biomass production,” van der Lelie said.
This study was funded by the
Office of Biological and Environmental Research within DOE’s
Office of Science, by Brookhaven’s Laboratory Directed
Research and Development Fund, and by the Flanders Science
Foundation and the Institute for the Promotion of Innovation by
Science and Technology in Flanders, both in Belgium.
Source:
Brookhaven National Laboratory
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