4.7 Article

Achromobacter insolitus and Zoogloea ramigera associated with wheat plants (Triticum aestivum)

Journal

BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS
Volume 44, Issue 8, Pages 1107-1112

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00374-008-0292-4

Keywords

identification; diazotrophic bacteria; electron microscope; root colonization

Categories

Funding

  1. CAPES
  2. FAPESP

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This study reports for the first time the presence of diazotrophic bacteria belonging to the genera Achromobacter and Zoogloea associated with wheat plants. These bacterial strains were identified by the analysis of 16S rDNA sequences. The bacterium IAC-AT-8 was identified as Azospirillum brasiliense, whereas isolates IAC-HT-11 and IAC-HT-12 were identified as Achromobacter insolitus and Zoogloea ramigera, respectively. A greenhouse experiment involving a non-sterilized soil was carried out with the aim to study the endophytic feature of these strains. After 40 days from inoculation, all the strains were in the inner of roots, but they were not detected in soil. In order to assess the location inside wheat plants, an experiment was conducted under axenic conditions. Fifteen days after inoculation, preparations of inoculated plants were observed by the scanning electron microscope, using the cryofracture technique, and by the transmission electron microscope. It was observed that all isolates were present on the external part of the roots and in the inner part at the elongation region, in cortex cells, but not in the endodermis or in the vascular bundle region. No colonizing bacterial cells were observed in wheat leaves.

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