Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions (Mar 2001)

Comparison of Benefit to Sugarcane Plant Growth and 15N2 Incorporation Following Inoculation of Sterile Plants with Acetobacter diazotrophicus Wild-Type and Nif¯ Mutant Strains

  • Myrna Sevilla,
  • Robert H. Burris,
  • Nirmala Gunapala,
  • Christina Kennedy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1094/MPMI.2001.14.3.358
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
pp. 358 – 366

Abstract

Read online

The ability of the nitrogen-fixing bacterial endophyte Acetobacter diazotrophicus strain PAl5 to enhance the growth of sugarcane SP70-1143 was evaluated in the growth chamber, greenhouse, and field by comparing plants inoculated with wild-type and Nif¯ mutant MAd3A in two independent experiments. The wild-type and Nif¯ mutant strains colonized sugarcane plants equally and persisted in mature plants. In N-deficient conditions, sugarcane plants inoculated with A. diazotrophicus PAl5 generally grew better and had a higher total N content 60 days after planting than did plants inoculated with mutant MAd3A or uninoculated plants. These results indicate that the transfer of fixed N from A. diazotrophicus to sugarcane might be a significant mechanism for plant growth promotion in this association. When N was not limiting, growth enhancement was observed in plants inoculated with either wild-type or Nif¯ mutants, suggesting the additional effect of a plant growth promoting factor provided by A. diazotrophicus. A 15N2 incorporation experiment demonstrated that A. diazotrophicus wild-type strains actively fixed N2 inside sugarcane plants, whereas the Nif¯ mutants did not.

Keywords