Microorganisms (May 2021)

Novel Plant-Associated <i>Acidobacteria</i> Promotes Growth of Common Floating Aquatic Plants, Duckweeds

  • Yasuko Yoneda,
  • Kyosuke Yamamoto,
  • Ayaka Makino,
  • Yasuhiro Tanaka,
  • Xian-Ying Meng,
  • Junko Hashimoto,
  • Kazuo Shin-ya,
  • Noriyuki Satoh,
  • Manabu Fujie,
  • Tadashi Toyama,
  • Kazuhiro Mori,
  • Michihiko Ike,
  • Masaaki Morikawa,
  • Yoichi Kamagata,
  • Hideyuki Tamaki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9061133
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
p. 1133

Abstract

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Duckweeds are small, fast growing, and starch- and protein-rich aquatic plants expected to be a next generation energy crop and an excellent biomaterial for phytoremediation. Despite such an importance, very little is known about duckweed–microbe interactions that would be a key biological factor for efficient industrial utilization of duckweeds. Here we first report the duckweed growth promoting ability of bacterial strains belonging to the phylum Acidobacteria, the members of which are known to inhabit soils and terrestrial plants, but their ecological roles and plant–microbe interactions remain largely unclear. Two novel Acidobacteria strains, F-183 and TBR-22, were successfully isolated from wild duckweeds and phylogenetically affiliated with subdivision 3 and 6 of the phylum, respectively, based on 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis. In the co-culture experiments with aseptic host plants, the F-183 and TBR-22 strains visibly enhanced growth (frond number) of six duckweed species (subfamily Lemnoideae) up to 1.8–5.1 times and 1.6–3.9 times, respectively, compared with uninoculated controls. Intriguingly, both strains also increased the chlorophyll content of the duckweed (Lemna aequinoctialis) up to 2.4–2.5 times. Under SEM observation, the F-183 and TBR-22 strains were epiphytic and attached to the surface of duckweed. Taken together, our findings suggest that indigenous plant associated Acidobacteria contribute to a healthy growth of their host aquatic plants.

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