López-García Silvina L, Vázquez Tirso E E, Favelukes Gabriel, Lodeiro Aníbal R
Instituto de Bioquímica y Biología Molecular, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Calles 47 y 115 (1900), La Plata, Argentina.
Environ Microbiol. 2002 Apr;4(4):216-24. doi: 10.1046/j.1462-2920.2002.00287.x.
Selected Bradyrhizobium japonicum strains inoculated on soybean seeds often fail to occupy a significant proportion of nodules when a competitor rhizobial population is established in the soil. This competition problem could result from a genetic/ physiological advantage of the adapted soil population over the introduced inoculant or from a positional advantage, as the soil population already occupies the soil profile where the roots will penetrate, whereas the inoculant remains concentrated around the seeds. Here, we have assessed the contribution of these factors with a laboratory model in which a rhizobial population is established in sterile vermiculite. We observed that the wild-type strain B. japonicum LP 3004 was able to grow in pots with N-free plant nutrient solution-watered vermiculite for six or seven generations with a duplication rate of at least 0.7 day(-1). In addition, the rhizobial population persisted for 3 months with 10(6)-10(7) colony-forming units ml(-1) of the vermiculite-retained solution. N-starved, young rhizobial cultures are more efficient in performing several steps along their early association with soybean roots. However, N starvation during growth of rhizobia used for seed inoculation did not enhance their competitiveness against a 1 month vermiculite-established rhizobial population, which occupied more than 72% of the nodules. When a similarly established rhizobial population was recovered from the vermiculite and homogeneously suspended in plant nutrient solution, these cells were significantly less competitive (29% of nodules occupied) than rhizobia obtained from a fresh, logarithmic culture in a N-poor minimal medium, thus indicating that cell position rather than intrinsic competitiveness was the determinant for nodule occupation.
当土壤中存在竞争性根瘤菌种群时,接种在大豆种子上的某些慢生根瘤菌菌株往往无法占据很大比例的根瘤。这种竞争问题可能源于适应性土壤种群相对于引入的接种剂具有遗传/生理优势,或者源于位置优势,因为土壤种群已经占据了根系将要穿透的土壤剖面,而接种剂仍集中在种子周围。在这里,我们使用一个实验室模型评估了这些因素的作用,在该模型中,根瘤菌种群在无菌蛭石中建立。我们观察到,野生型菌株日本慢生根瘤菌LP 3004能够在装有无氮植物营养液浇灌的蛭石的花盆中生长六到七代,倍增率至少为0.7天-1。此外,根瘤菌种群在蛭石保留溶液中以106-107个菌落形成单位毫升-1的数量持续存在3个月。氮饥饿的年轻根瘤菌培养物在与大豆根早期关联的几个步骤中表现得更有效。然而,用于种子接种的根瘤菌在生长过程中氮饥饿并没有增强它们对在蛭石中建立1个月的根瘤菌种群的竞争力,该种群占据了超过72%的根瘤。当从蛭石中回收类似建立的根瘤菌种群并均匀悬浮在植物营养液中时,这些细胞的竞争力明显低于从贫氮基本培养基中的新鲜对数培养物中获得的根瘤菌(占据29%的根瘤),因此表明细胞位置而非内在竞争力是根瘤占据的决定因素。