4.4 Article

Role of Plasmid in Pesticide Degradation and Metal Tolerance in Two Plant Growth-Promoting Rhizobacteria Bacillus cereus (NCIM 5557) and Bacillus safensis (NCIM 5558)

Journal

CURRENT MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 79, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00284-022-02793-w

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Funding

  1. Department of Science and Technology (West Bengal), India [757(Sanc)/ST/P/ST/1G-15/2014]

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Two pesticide-resistant and heavy metal-tolerant bacteria were isolated from agricultural fields. These bacteria showed plant growth-promoting activities in lentil and cow pea. They could utilize pesticides as carbon/nitrogen sources and degrade them. Both bacteria exhibited high concentration tolerance to heavy metals, with B. safensis showing better pesticide degradation. Plasmid curing experiments revealed that pesticide resistance genes are plasmid-dependent in B. cereus but genomic in B. safensis.
Disha A (Bacillus cereus) and Disha B (Bacillus safensis) were isolated from pesticide-infested agricultural field and showed tolerance against pesticides, heavy metals, and antibiotics. The isolates exhibited PGPR activities in vitro as well as in field conditions in lentil (Lens culinaris) and cow pea (Vigna unguiculata). Both the Bacillus species could not be grown in mineral salt medium but efficiently grown in the media supplemented with pesticide (imidacloprid/carbendazim) demonstrating the utilization of pesticide as carbon/nitrogen source. The HPLC studies exhibited the pesticide (imidacloprid/carbendazim) degradation by both the bacteria. B. safensis showed better degradation of carbendazim (88.93%) and imidacloprid (82.48%) than that of B. cereus 78.07% and 49.12%, respectively. The bacterial isolates showed high concentration of heavy metal tolerance viz. lead, molybdenum, cadmium, copper, cobalt, and zinc, except mercury. Both the bacteria possessed single plasmid. The plasmid-cured isolates of B. cereus did not tolerate any pesticide, whereas that of B. safensis tolerated all the pesticides, like wild strains. The plasmid curing experiments did not affect the heavy metal tolerance ability of both the bacteria indicating the genomic nature of heavy metal tolerance genes, whereas pesticide resistance genes are plasmid-dependent in B. cereus but genomic in B. safensis.

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