Plant-growth-promoting rhizobacteria exert beneficial effects on plants through their capacity for nitrogen fixation, phytohormone production, phosphate solubilization, and improvement of the water and mineral status of plants. We suggested that these bacteria may also have the potential to express degradative activity toward glyphosate, a commonly used organophosphorus herbicide. In this study, 10 strains resistant to a 10 mM concentration of glyphosate were isolated from the rhizoplane of various plants. Five of these strains--Alcaligenes sp. K1, Comamonas sp. K4, Azomonas sp. K5, Pseudomonas sp. K3, and Enterobacter cloacae K7--possessed a number of associative traits, including fixation of atmospheric nitrogen, solubilization of phosphates, and synthesis of the phytohormone indole-3-acetic acid. One strain, E. cloacae K7, could utilize glyphosate as a source of P. Gas-liquid chromatography showed that E. cloacae growth correlated with a decline in herbicide content in the culture medium (40% of the initial 5mM content), with no glyphosate accumulating inside the cells. Thin-layer chromatography analysis of the intermediate metabolites of glyphosate degradation found that E. cloacae K7 had a C-P lyase activity and degraded glyphosate to give sarcosine, which was then oxidized to glycine. In addition, strain K7 colonized the roots of common sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) and sugar sorghum (Sorghum saccharatum Pers.), promoting the growth and development of sunflower seedlings. Our findings extend current knowledge of glyphosate-degrading rhizosphere bacteria and may be useful for developing a biotechnology for the cleanup and restoration of glyphosate-polluted soils.
The transformation of sodium arsenite and sodium arsenate by the rhizospheric nitrogenfixing bacterium Azospirillum brasilense Sp245 in association with wheat (Triticum aestivum L. 'Saratovskaya 29') was studied. The effect produced by the A. brasilense strain on the morphological parameters of wheat in an As-polluted environment was examined. The plants were cultivated in a hydroponic system, with glass beads serving as a support for root growth. The plant-growth medium (an artificial soil solution) was deficient in P and Fe. The total initial As concentrations used were 75, 750, and 7500 lg l -1 . The As compounds used contained sodium arsenate and sodium arsenite at an As(V):As(III) ratio of 1:3.6 (in terms of As) in all experiments. Inoculation of A. brasilense Sp245 led to a decrease in the overall root length and to the formation of lateral roots; both effects are possibly related to the bacteria's ability to synthesize auxins. Inoculation also changed the As(V): As(III) ratio of the plant-growth medium. In all experiments, the concentration of As(V) in the nutrient medium increased relative to the initial one and was approximately 1.5-fold higher than that in the medium of uninoculated plants. This value slightly decreased (1.6 > 1.5 > 1.4) with increasing concentration of As in the medium. Azospirillum-inoculated plants accumulated less As than did the surface-sterilized uninoculated plants. This study shows that A. brasilense Sp245 in association with wheat changes the speciation, bioavailability, and plant uptake of As.
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