A greenhouse experiment was performed to evaluate the effects of plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) on nodulation, biological nitrogen fixation (BNF) and growth of the common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv. Tenderlake). Single and dual inoculation treatments of bean with Rhizobium and/or PGPR were administered to detect possible changes in the levels of and interactions between the phytohormones IAA and cytokinin. Bean plants cv. Tenderlake were grown in pots containing Fluvic Neosol eutrophic (pH 6.5). Fourteen kilogram aliquots of soil contained in 15-l pots were autoclaved. Bean seeds were surface sterilized and inoculated with Rhizobium tropici (CIAT 899-standard strain) alone and in combination with one of the PGPR strains: Bacillus endophyticus (DSM 13796), B. pumilus (DSM 27), B. subtilis (DSM 704), Paenibacillus lautus (DSM 13411), P. macerans (DSM 24), P. polymyxa (DSM 36), P. polymyxa (Loutit L.) or Bacillus sp.(65E180). The experimental design was randomized block design with three replications. Beans co-inoculated with Rhizobium tropici (CIAT899) and Paenibacillus polymyxa (DSM 36) had higher leghemoglobin concentrations, nitrogenase activity and N 2 fixation efficiency and thereby formed associations of greater symbiotic efficiency. Inoculation with Rhizobium and P. polymyxa strain Loutit (L) stimulated nodulation as well as nitrogen fixation. PGPR also stimulated specific-nodulation (number of nodules per gram of root dry weight) increases that translated into higher levels of accumulated nitrogen. The activities of phytohormones depended on their content and interactions with Rhizobium tropici and Paenibacillus and/or Bacillus (PGPR) strains which affect the cytokinin in content in the common bean.
It can be concluded that the pediatric medicines studied have a high SC and low pH, which vary according to therapeutic class, daily dose, and brand. Caution about dental caries, dental erosion, and systemic diseases such as diabetes mellitus is warranted when these medicines are ingested frequently.
The milk-clotting and proteolytic activities of extracellular enzyme preparations from Nocardiopsis sp. were investigated under different culture conditions. A soybean flour medium was used, with concentrations of soybean flour and of glucose varying from 0.25 to 1% w/v and from 0 to 1% w/v, respectively. Growth was monitored with 2 ml samples withdrawn from the culture medium at 8-h intervals, for determination of total protein, proteolytic activity, milk-clotting activity and sugar reduction. The best milk-clotting protease production, with a specific activity of 24.49 U/mg at 40 h, was obtained in the glucose-free medium containing soybean flour 1% w/v.
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