10th International Conference on Tissue Science and Regenerative Medicine
Tokyo, Germany
Pranab Roy
Haldia Institute of Technology, India
Title: Characterization of plant growth promoting bacteria isolated from nodule co-infecting a single leguminous plant
Biography
Biography: Pranab Roy
Abstract
The green revolution ushered in a growth in the production of food crops in India. From a net importer of food grains ,India became self-sufficient increasing the total production from 50 million metric tonnes in mid-sixties to 200 million metric tonnes in mid eighties. This was possible due to higher yielding and hybrid varieties of seeds, increased input of chemical fertilizers and insecticides or pesticides.
However , the pitfalls of high usage of chemical fertilizers was a deterioration in the quality of agricultural soil. The natural microbes present in the rhizospheric soil died due to excess chemicals the depletion of oraganic carbon content. The water retention capacity was also adversely affected due to lower porosity of the soil, sometimes the soil became acidic causing lower productivity of plants.
To overcome all these problems, the use of organic manure and biofertilizers were introduced. These are beneficial to the crop plants due to the following properties:
1.Nitrogen Fixation
2. Inorganic phosphate solubilization.
3. Production of siderophore.
4.Production of ACC Deaminase.
Nitrogen fixation by symbiotic microorganisms like Rhizobium,ocuring in the root nodules of leguminous plants have been reported long back.
In our studies, aspetic root nodules of Fenugreek (Methi) were crushed to isolate a variety of nitrogen fixing microbes. Though microbiological and biochemical studies indicated these mucoid colonies all gram negative with different morphologies to the Rhizobium species, sequencing of 16s rRNA genes and molecular phylogeny showed three o f the isolates to be :
- R1 Enetrobacter cloacae (KX687556)
- R10 Pantoea dispersa (KX687557)
- R12 Enterobacter ludwigii (KX687554)
The temperature and salinity tolerance of these cultures were studied.In order to increase these properties of abiotic stress tolerance. UV Mutagenesis was tried , varying the time of exposure of the plated cultures to UV radiation, the survivors (>1% of initial population) were screened for growth at 0.5M NaCl and at 44C.
The selected mutants of R1 ,R10 and R12 were studied for the plant growth promoting activities like; IAA (growth hormone) production., Siderophore production, Phosphate solubilization .
Finally the effects of the isolated bacteria and mutants of each and a consortium of all three were pre-treated with methi seeds and germinated in pots to find out their effects on the growth of the plants. These are being analyzed after 40 days of growth in the soil.