• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 21
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • Tagged with
  • 43
  • 43
  • 43
  • 43
  • 12
  • 8
  • 8
  • 6
  • 6
  • 6
  • 6
  • 6
  • 6
  • 5
  • 5
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

Efeito da aplicação de fitorreguladores em rizobactérias isoladas de diferentes variedades de cana-de-açúcar (Saccharum spp.), no município de Araras - SP /

Meneghin, Silvana Perissatto. January 2008 (has links)
Orientador: Samia Maria Tauk-Tornisielo / Banca: Sandra Regina Ceccato Antonini / Banca: Regina Teresa Rosim Monteiro / Banca: Antonio Ismael Bassinelo / Banca: Carlos Renato Corso / Resumo: Nas usinas, no início da safra, a obtenção de matéria-prima de boa qualidade é maximizada com a aplicação de fitorreguladores, os quais aumentam o teor de sacarose da cana-de-açúcar. Em áreas onde eles são aplicados, tem se observado melhor desenvolvimento e perfilhamento das plantas. Avaliou-se aqui o efeito da aplicação dos fitorreguladores Ethrel e Moddus sobre o crescimento da cana-de-açúcar, de forma direta e indiretamente, através da modificação da microbiota rizosférica. Além disso, objetivou-se também avaliar o uso de rizobactérias, isoladas dos experimentos com fitorreguladores, para o biocontrole de doenças e seus possíveis mecanismos de ação. Os efeitos dos fitorreguladores sobre os microrganismos do solo foram avaliados em meios de cultura acrescidos de Ethrel e Moddus em concentrações de 0 a 1000 ppm. Estes fitorreguladores foram aplicados via foliar e via solo para análise do desenvolvimento da cana-de-açúcar (variedades RB72454, RB835486 e RB855156) em casa-de-vegetação, utilizando-se solo sem tratamento e tratado com brometo de metila. Após dez meses, foram avaliadas a brotação, altura e matéria seca da parte aérea e das raízes das plantas cultivadas. Rizobactérias foram isoladas dos solos contidos nos vasos e avaliadas in vitro quanto à capacidade de controle de fungos fitopatogênicos (Thielaviopsis paradoxa, Fusarium spp. e Hendersonina sacchari), e in vivo, quanto à capacidade de promoção de crescimento de plântulas de cana-de-açúcar. Alguns mecanismos de ação das rizobactérias foram também estudados, como produção de ácido indol acético, ácido cianídrico, sideróforos e solubilização de fosfato inorgânico. Constatou-se que as populações de fungos foram mais sensíveis à adição dos fitorreguladores do que outros grupos de microrganismos, com redução...(Resumo completo, clicar acesso eletrônico abaixo) / Abstract: For sugar and alcohol industries, at the start of harvesting, to obtain good quality raw material is potentially possible with the application of plant regulators, which have a role in natural sugar cane maturation, increasing sucrose content. In areas where they have been applied, better plant development and shooting have been observed. The aim here was to evaluate the application of plant regulators Ethrel and Moddus on sugar cane growth, not only in a direct way, but also indirectly, through the modification of rhizosphere microorganisms. Besides, this work also aimed the evaluation of rhizobacteria isolated from the experiments using plant regulators upon the disease biocontrol and their action mechanisms in this respect. The effects of plant regulators upon the soil microorganisms were verified in culture media where Ethrel and Moddus were added in concentrations ranging from 0 to 1000 ppm, while the effects of these substances (applied in leaves and in soil) upon the sugar cane development (varieties RB72454, RB835486 and RB855156) were surveyed in greenhouse, using soil without treatment and treated with methyl bromide. After a ten-month period, the experiments were finished, and sprouting, height and aerial part and root dry matter were analyzed. Soil samples were taken from the pots for rhizobacteria isolation, which were evaluated initially in vitro regarding their ability to control plant pathogenic fungi (Thielaviopsis paradoxa, Fusarium spp. and Hendersonina sacchari), and in vivo, regarding their ability to promote sugar cane growth. Some action mechanisms were also studied, as indol acetic acid, cyanide acid and siderophore production and inorganic phosphate solubilization. It was verified that the fungi populations were more sensitive to the addition of plant regulators than other microorganisms, reducing their colony-forming unit (CFU)...(Complete abstract, click electronic access below) / Doutor
32

Bioprospecting di simbionti vegetali con proprietà PBS per lo sviluppo di nuovi prodotti biostimolanti: bridging tra i risultati della ricerca e gli aspetti normativi. / BIOPROSPECTING OF PLANT SYMBIONTS WITH PBS PROPERTIES FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF NOVEL PLANT BIOSTIMULANT PRODUCTS: BRIDGING RESEARCH OUTCOMES WITH REGULATORY ASPECTS

GUERRIERI, MARIA CHIARA 28 April 2021 (has links)
L'agricoltura moderna sta affrontando sfide come la perdita di fertilità del suolo, la variabilità climatica e gli attacchi di agenti patogeni in continuo aumento. Le pratiche agricole si stanno evolvendo verso sistemi sostenibili e rispettosi dell'ambiente. L'uso di biostimolanti (PBS, plant biostimulant) è una soluzione innovativa per affrontare le sfide di un’agricoltura sostenibile che garantisce un assorbimento ottimale dei nutrienti, una resa delle colture e tolleranza agli stress abiotici. In particolare, tra i diversi tipi di biostimolanti presenti sul mercato, i rizobatteri, classificati come Plant Growth Promoting Rhizobacteria (PGPR), offrono un nuovo approccio per promuovere la crescita delle piante, la mitigazione degli stress e l’aumento della resa colturale. Pertanto i PGPR sono considerati come una sorta di "probiotici" vegetali, poiché contribuiscono in modo efficiente alla nutrizione e all'immunità delle piante. L'obiettivo principale di questa tesi è isolare e identificare batteri presenti nella rizosfera di pomodoro (Solanum lycopersicum L.) che mostrano proprietà PBS, nonché valutare i meccanismi coinvolti nell'azione di promozione della crescita delle piante (Capitolo 2) e la genetica alla base di questi meccanismi (Capitolo 3 e 4). Infatti, una profonda comprensione dei meccanismi d’azione dei PGPR potrebbe colmare la mancanza di coerenza del dato di efficacia tra gli studi di laboratorio e gli studi in campo e stimolare la ricerca per la produzione e la commercializzazione di nuovi prodotti biostimolanti microbici. / Modern agriculture faces challenges such as loss of soil fertility, fluctuating climatic factors and increasing pathogen and pest attacks. Agricultural practices have been evolving towards organic, sustainable and environmentally friendly systems. The use of natural plant biostimulants (PBS) is an innovative solution to address the challenges in sustainable agriculture, to ensure optimal nutrient uptake, crop yield, quality and tolerance to abiotic stress. In particular, among different types of biostimulants present on the market, plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) offer a novel approach for promoting plant growth, mitigate stress and increase crop yield. Hence, PGPR inoculants are now considered as a kind of plant ‘probiotics’, since they efficiently contribute to plant nutrition and immunity. The main goal of this thesis was to isolate and identify bacteria symbionts of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) rhizosphere, which showed PBS properties and evaluate mechanism involved in the action of PGPR (Chapter 2), underlying genetics and physiological pathways (Chapter 3 and 4). Indeed, a deeply understanding of the mechanisms of plant growth promotion, could fulfill the lack of consistency between lab, greenhouse and field studies, and support commercialization of novel plant biostimulant products.
33

Pseudomonas spp. Isolated from the Soybean Nodule Interior Promote Soybean Growth upon Field Amendment

Doyle, Connor Patrick 31 August 2022 (has links)
Diazotrophic microbes reside in soybean nodules; however, other non-nitrogen fixing bacteria are a part of the interior nodule microbiome. Results from a previous greenhouse study show that a novel species of Pseudomonas associates with soybean nodules as a plant-growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR). This study observes the soybean growth promoting potential of Pseudomonas spp. in a field setting. Additionally, this study observed differences in soybean growth promotion based on amending the plant with isolated strains or a mixed culture of the species' strains. Two cultivars of soybean (Asgrow AG46X6 and Pioneer P48A60X) were either amended with isolated strains of the novel Pseudomonas spp. (referred to as PAMW1 and BUMW2 in this study), a mix of the two strains, or an uninoculated control. The study recorded measurements to observe growth, yield, and nitrogen fixation differences. The study uses two-way factorial ANOVAs and non-parametric, multivariate analyses to determine differences in growth promotion among samples. Soybean amended with PAMW1 has greater shoot mass, biomass, and height than other treatments. Through nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMS), samples amended with a mixed culture or PAMW1 may be different regarding growth promotion relative to the non-amended samples. Univariate results support the hypothesis that the novel Pseudomonas spp. benefit soybean in a field setting. However, it is inconclusive whether a mixed culture amendment of multiple strains alters the overall growth promotion of soybean compared to samples amended with isolated strains. / Master of Science / Soil hosts a relatively abundant and diverse community of microorganisms. Moreover, the area of soil that interacts closely with plant roots and their associated exudates, called the rhizosphere, has a significantly greater microbial abundance than surrounding bulk soil. Interactions between microbes and the plant often promote plant growth because of secondary metabolites produced by these beneficial microbes. One particular bacterial species, belonging to the Pseudomonas genus, was discovered and extracted from the soybean nodule interior. Nitrogen-fixing bacteria predominantly reside in the soybean nodule, yet this microorganism cannot fix nitrogen. Although trace amounts of non-nitrogen-fixing bacteria reside in the soybean nodule, this novel species has a relatively high abundance. This study determines the benefits of this species in the soybean nodule. Following positive results in a greenhouse study, this field experiment observes variance in soybean growth and productivity based on their received bacterial amendment. For this study, two soybean cultivars were either amended with an isolated strain of this species, a mix of the two strains, or left uninoculated to serve as a control. Numerous recorded measurements serve as indices of soybean growth and productivity. The results suggest that this novel Pseudomonas species benefits the plant by significantly improving biomass. With further research, this species can potentially serve as an environmentally sensitive and sustainable alternative to fertilizers through its ability to promote soybean growth.
34

Pseudomonas spp. Isolated from Soybean Nodules Promote Soybean Growth and Nitrogen Fixation

Griggs, Roland Stephen 08 June 2020 (has links)
Nitrogen-fixing bacteria in soybean nodules convert atmospheric nitrogen to plant-available forms in exchange for carbon from the plant, but other non-nitrogen-fixing bacteria also reside in nodules, and their role in the nodule is not well understood. This study was conducted to determine the effect of three non-nitrogen-fixing Pseudomonas spp. strains isolated from nodules on soybean, and we hypothesized these strains benefit soybean. A greenhouse study in which two cultivars of soybean (Asgrow AG46X6 and Pioneer P48A60X) were treated with three fluorescent Pseudomonas spp. strains (referred to in this study as Bullseye, Pancake, and Starfish) and an uninoculated control. Soybeans were harvested at two time points: the R2/R3 growth stage and the R6 growth stage. Following each harvest, measures of growth, yield, and nitrogen fixation were taken, and data were analyzed using two non-parametric, multivariate analyses: multiple response permutation procedure (MRPP) and permutational multivariate analysis of variance (PERMANOVA). Both analyses showed soybeans of both cultivars treated with Pancake differed from controls following the first harvest but not the second. When analyzed individually, most metrics for growth, yield, and nitrogen fixation following the first harvest were not significantly different between Pancake and control treatments, but Pancake treatment means were still generally higher than controls. If metrics are considered collectively in conjunction with the results of the multivariate analyses, the results show Pancake generally increased soybean growth and nitrogen fixation. These findings support the hypothesis that non-nitrogen-fixing bacteria from nodules benefit plants, and such bacteria have the potential to serve as biofertilizers. / Master of Science in Life Sciences / Soybeans are one of the most commonly grown crops in the world, and nitrogen-fixing bacteria colonize the roots of soybeans and initiate the formation of spherical nodules attached to the roots. Inside the nodules, these bacteria convert atmospheric nitrogen to plant-available forms in exchange for sugar from the plant, and such bacteria reduce the need to add nitrogen fertilizer to agricultural fields. Other non-nitrogen-fixing bacteria also reside in nodules, but their role in the nodule is not well understood. If these bacteria benefit soybeans, they have the potential to serve as biofertilizers (microbial inoculants that promote plant growth). This study was conducted to determine whether non-nitrogen-fixing bacteria isolated from nodules benefit soybean. A greenhouse study in which two cultivars of soybean (Asgrow AG46X6 and Pioneer P48A60X) were grown in soil and were either left uninoculated or were inoculated with one of three strains of bacteria from the genus, Pseudomonas (referred to in this study as Bullseye, Pancake, and Starfish). Following harvest, measures of growth, yield, and nitrogen fixation were taken, and data showed the bacteria generally benefited the soybean plants. Although, these results showed the bacteria benefitted the plants, field trials and further testing in the greenhouse should be conducted before using these bacteria as commercial biofertilizers. Additionally, the effects of other non-nitrogen-fixing nodule bacteria on soybeans should also be tested to identify other beneficial strains, and the cost of production should be compared to the potential gains of using such bacteria before they are developed into biofertilizers.
35

Étude des communautés microbiennes rhizosphériques de ligneux indigènes de sols anthropogéniques, issus d’effluents industriels / Study of rhizosphere microbial communities from native woody species collected on anthropogenic soils made of industrial effluents

Zappelini, Cyril 03 July 2018 (has links)
Mon sujet de thèse intègre l’un des projets globaux de l’UMR UFC/CNRS 6249 Chrono-Environnement intitule « stratégies de phytoremédiation basées sur l’utilisation d’arbres et de microorganismes associés », qui s’appuie, entre autre, sur 2 projets de recherche :• le projet PROLIPHYT (programme Eco-Industrie, 2013-2018, ADEME) intitulé « PROduction de LIgneux PHYtoremédiants»,• le projet PHYTOCHEM (ANR CD2i, 2013-2018) intitulé « Développement de procédés chimiques éco-innovants pour valoriser les biomasses issues des phytotechnologies ».Les objectifs généraux sont d’améliorer le potentiel de phytoremédiation d’un panel d’espèces ligneuses et de développer le potentiel microbien pour une phytoremédiation aidée sur sol contaminé. En plus de limiter l’impact des polluants, cette stratégie vise à promouvoir la production de biomasse sur sols délaissés et non exploitables par l’agriculture, tout en assurant la biodiversité nécessaire à la restauration d’un écosystème anthropogénique.Mon travail de thèse est financé au travers un contrat doctoral ministériel handicap (dyslexie). Il s’appuie sur la réhabilitation de deux zones de stockage de sédiments industriels, utilisés jusque dans les années 2000. Ces deux sites expérimentaux (site INOVYN de St Symphorien-sur-Saône en Côte d’Or, site CRISTAL de l’Ochsenfeld en Alsace) présentent des caractéristiques physico-chimiques très particulières qui en font des lieux d’étude privilégiés. Le premier est une ancienne lagune de décantation dont les sédiments enrichis en Hg, Ba et As proviennent du traitement des eaux usées issues du procédé d’électrolyse à Hg de l’entreprise SOLVAY. Le second est une lagune constituée d’un remblai dans lequel ont été stockés depuis les années 1930, les résidus d’extraction du dioxyde de titane de l’Usine CRISTAL de Thann. A l’inverse du premier site expérimental, on observe une flore peu abondante qui se traduit par un développement hétérogène d’une espèce ligneuse principale, le bouleau.La recolonisation naturelle et spontanée de végétaux, plus particulièrement d’espèces ligneuses sur les deux sites est sans doute le résultat d’étroites collaborations avec des microorganismes telluriques situés aux abords de leur système racinaire. Nous avons ainsi choisi de travailler sur 3 espèces pionnières qui se sont naturellement réimplantées sur les deux sites d’études : le saule et le peuplier pour la friche industrielle de Tavaux et le bouleau pour l’unité de traitement des effluents du site de l’Ochsenfeld. / AbstractMy thesis subject includes one of the global projects of the UMR UFC/CNRS 6249 Chrono-Environnement entitled "phytoremediation strategies based on the use of trees and associated microorganisms", which is based, among other things, on 2 research projects:• the PROLIPHYT project (Eco-Industry programme, 2013-2018, ADEME) entitled "Production of woody phytoremediants",• the PHYTOCHEM project (ANR CD2i, 2013-2018) entitled "Development of eco-innovative chemical processes to exploit biomasses from phytotechnologies".The general objectives are to improve the phytoremediation potential of a panel of woody species and to develop the microbial potential for assisted phytoremediation on contaminated soil. In addition to limiting the impact of pollutants, this strategy aims to promote the production of biomass on land abandoned and not exploitable by agriculture, while ensuring the biodiversity needed to restore an anthropogenic ecosystem.My thesis work is financed through a ministerial doctoral contract for disability (dyslexia). It is based on the rehabilitation of two industrial sediment storage areas, used until the 2000s. These two experimental sites (INOVYN site of Saint-Symphorien-sur-Saône in Côte-d'Or, CRISTAL site of Ochsenfeld in Alsace) present very particular physico-chemical characteristics which make them privileged places of study. The first is a former settling lagoon whose sediments enriched in Hg, Ba and As come from the treatment of wastewater from SOLVAY's Hg electrolysis process. The second is a lagoon consisting of a backfill in which the titanium dioxide extraction residues from the CRISTAL Thann Plant have been stored since the 1930s. In contrast to the first experimental site, there is a low abundance of flora which results in heterogeneous development of a main woody species, the birch.The natural and spontaneous recolonisation of plants, more particularly woody species on both sites, is undoubtedly the result of close collaboration with telluric microorganisms located near their root systems. We have thus chosen to work on 3 pioneer species that have naturally relocated to the two study sites: willow and poplar for the industrial wasteland of Tavaux and birch for the effluent treatment unit at the Ochsenfeld site.
36

TOXICITY OF ENGINEERED NANOMATERIALS TO PLANT GROWTH PROMOTING RHIZOBACTERIA

Lewis, Ricky W. 01 January 2016 (has links)
Engineered nanomaterials (ENMs) have become ubiquitous in consumer products and industrial applications, and consequently the environment. Much of the environmentally released ENMs are expected to enter terrestrial ecosystems via land application of nano-enriched biosolids to agricultural fields. Among the organisms most likely to encounter nano-enriched biosolids are the key soil bacteria known as plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR). I reviewed what is known concerning the toxicological effects of ENMs to PGPR and observed the need for high-throughput methods to evaluate lethal and sublethal toxic responses of aerobic microbes. I addressed this issue by developing high-throughput microplate assays which allowed me to normalize oxygen consumption responses to viable cell estimates. Oxygen consumption is a crucial step in cellular respiration which may be examined relatively easily along with viability and may provide insight into the metabolic/physiological response of bacteria to toxic substances. Because many of the most toxic nanomaterials (i.e. metal containing materials) exhibit some level of ionic dissolution, I first developed my methods by examining metal ion responses in the PGPR, Bacillus amyloliquefaciens GB03. I found this bacterium exhibits differential oxygen consumption responses to Ag+, Zn2+, and Ni2+. Exposure to Ag+ elicited pronounced increases in O2 consumption, particularly when few viable cells were observed. Also, while Ni2+ and Zn2+ are generally thought to induce similar toxic responses, I found O2 consumption per viable cell was much more variable during Ni2+ exposure and that Zn2+ induced increased O2 utilization to a lesser extent than Ag+. Additionally, I showed my method is useful for probing toxicity of traditional antibiotics by observing large increases in O2 utilization in response to streptomycin, which was used as a positive control due to its known effects on bacterial respiration. After showing the utility of my method for examining metal ion responses in a single species of PGPR, I investigated the toxicity of silver ENMs (AgENMs) and ions to three PGPR, B. amyloliquefaciens GB03, Sinorhizobium meliloti 2011, and Pseudomonas putida UW4. The ENM exposures consisted of untransformed, polyvinylpyrrolidone coated silver ENMs (PVP-AgENMs) and 100% sulfidized silver ENMs (sAgENMs), which are representative of environmentally transformed AgENMs. I observed species specific O2 consumption responses to silver ions and PVP-AgENMs. Specifically, P. putida exhibited increased O2 consumption across the observed range of viable cells, while B. amyloliquefaciens exhibited responses similar to those found in my first study. Additionally, S. meliloti exhibited more complex responses to Ag+ and PVP-AgENMs, with decreased O2 consumption when cell viability was ~50-75% of no metal controls and increased O2 consumption when cell viability was <50%. I also found the abiotically dissolved fraction of the PVP-AgENMs was likely responsible for most of the toxic response, while abiotic dissolution did not explain the toxicity of sAgENMs. My work has yielded a straightforward, cost-effective, and high-throughput method of evaluating viability and oxygen consumption in aerobic bacteria. I have used this method to test a broad range of toxic substances, including, metal ions, antibiotics, and untransformed and transformed ENMs. I observed species specific toxic responses to Ag+, PVP-AgENMs, and sAgENMs in PGPR. These results not only show the clear utility of the methodology, but also that it will be crucial to continue examining the responses of specific bacterial strains even as nanotoxicology, as a field, must move toward more complex and environmentally relevant systems.
37

Interaction plante-microorganismes : Implication de la rhizobactérie Phyllobacterium brassicacearum dans les réponses d’Arabidopsis thaliana au stress hydrique / Plant-microbes interactions : Implication of Phyllobacterium brassicacearum in Arabidopsis responses to water deficit

Bresson, Justine 16 December 2013 (has links)
Les bactéries promotrices de la croissance des plantes (PGPR) peuvent améliorer la performance et la tolérance des plantes lors de stress environnementaux. Arabidopsis thaliana est un modèle de choix pour étudier les mécanismes impliqués dans les interactions plante-bactéries. Nous avons analysé de multiples traits associés à la dynamique de croissance, au développement et la physiologie des végétaux afin d'évaluer les effets de l'inoculation par Phyllobacterium brassicacearum STM196, une PGPR isolée de la rhizosphère du colza, sur les réponses d'A. thaliana à des stress hydriques de différentes intensités. Grâce à des outils performants de phénotypage, nous avons développé une nouvelle approche d'analyse à haut-débit pour examiner l'implication de STM196 dans les stratégies de résistance des plantes au stress hydrique. Nos résultats montrent pour la première fois que les PGPR peuvent interférer dans les stratégies d'échappement des plantes grâce à des modifications de la croissance et du temps de floraison. De plus, STM196 induit une meilleure résistance au déficit hydrique modéré et une meilleure tolérance à la déshydratation sous une contrainte hydrique sévère. L'inoculation par STM196 peut ainsi représenter une valeur ajoutée aux stratégies de résistance intrinsèques aux plantes, ce qui est illustrée par sa remarquable capacité à promouvoir la survie et la production de biomasse végétale dans des environnements contrastés. Nos résultats soulignent l'importance des interactions plantes-bactéries dans les réponses des plantes à la sécheresse et offrent de nouvelles voies de recherches pour l'amélioration de la résistance à la sécheresse dans les cultures. / Plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) can enhance plant performance and plant tolerance to environmental stresses. Arabidopsis thaliana is a useful organism to study the mechanisms involved in plant-PGPR interactions. We analyzed multiple plant traits related to growth dynamics, development and physiology in order to assess the effects of Phyllobacterium brassicacearum STM196 strain, isolated from the rhizosphere of oilseed rape, on Arabidopsis responses to well-defined soil water availability. Using powerful tools for phenotyping, we developed a new high-throughput analysis to examine the implication of STM196 on plant strategies to cope with water stress. Our results show for the first time that PGPR can interfere in escape strategies of plants through modifications in plant growth and flowering time. Moreover, STM196 induced a better resistance to moderate water deficit and a better tolerance to dehydration under a severe stress. Inoculation by STM196 can represent an added value to plant resistance strategies, as illustrated by its remarkable ability to promote plant survival and biomass production under contrasted environments. Our results highlight the importance of plant-bacteria interactions in plant responses to drought and provide a new avenue of investigations to improve drought resistance in crops.
38

Identification and characterization of type III effector proteins in plant-associated bacteria

Thomas, William J. 04 May 2012 (has links)
Symbioses between microbes and multicellular eukaryotes are found in all biomes, and encompass a spectrum of symbiotic lifestyles that includes parasitism and disease, commensalism, and mutually beneficial interdependent host-microbe relationships. Regardless of outcome, these symbiotic lifestyles are governed by a complex molecular "courtship" between microbe and potential host. This courtship is the primary determinant of the host range of a given microsymbiont. Host immunity poses a formidable barrier to the establishment of host-microbe relationships, and the majority of microbial suitors will be thwarted by it. Only by successfully "wooing" the host cell's immune defenses with the appropriate molecular signals can a microsymbiont successfully colonize its host. A strategy common to microsymbionts across the spectrum of symbiotic lifestyles and host organisms is the delivery of microbial-encoded effector proteins into the cytoplasm of host cells to manipulate the host cell's molecular machinery for the purposes of subverting host immunity. Bacteria, in particular, have adapted a number of secretion systems for this purpose. The most well-characterized of these is the type III secretion system (T3SS), a molecular apparatus that specializes in injecting type III effector (T3Es) proteins directly into host cells. The work in this thesis focuses on T3Es of plant-associated bacteria, with particular emphasis on mutualistic bacteria. We present evidence that collections of T3Es from Sinorhizobium fredii and Bradyrhizobium japonicum are, in stark contrast to those of phytopathogenic bacteria, in a co-evolutionary equilibrium with their hosts. This equilibrium is characterized by highly conserved T3E collections consisting of many "core" T3Es with little variation in nucleotide sequence. The T3Es of Mesorhizobium loti MAFF303099 suggest a completely different picture of the evolution of T3Es. MAFF303099 recently acquired its T3SS locus, and the work in this thesis provides an evolutionary snapshot of a mutualist that is innovating a T3E collection primarily through horizontal gene transfer. Collectively, this work represents the first comprehensive catalog of T3Es of rhizobia and, in the case of Sinorhizobium and Bradyrhizobium, the first evidence of purifying selection for T3Es. / Graduation date: 2012
39

Improving abiotic and biotic stress tolerance in floriculture crops

South, Kaylee 13 November 2020 (has links)
No description available.
40

Untersuchungen zum Einfluss spezieller Rhizosphärenbakterien auf Pflanzenwachstum und Fusarium spp.-Toleranz bei Spargel (Asparagus officinalis L.)

Lord, Fritz 02 December 2002 (has links)
Der Einfluss der Rhizosphärenbakterien Bacillus subtilis FZB 24, FZB 37, FZB 42, Bacillus pumilus RK 13 und Streptomyces graminofaciens und des Algenpräparates Goemar Fruton Spezial® (Ascophyllum nodosum) auf Wachstum, Ertrag und Toleranz gegenüber Fusarium spp. bei Spargel wurde untersucht. Es wurden mehrjährige Parzellenfeldversuche und Modellversuche unter kontrollierten Bedingungen mit natürlich Fusarium spp. belasteten Böden und mit speziellen Fusarium Erregern inokulierten Substraten durchgeführt. Die Analyse des verwendeten Nachbaubodens ergab eine wesentlich höhere Kontamination mit Fusarium spp. (56%) in Relation zum Fruchtfolgeboden (14%). F. oxysporum war die dominante Fusariumart. Desweiteren wurde eine ganze Reihe anderer Arten, wie z.B. F. acuminatum, F. culmorum, F. proliferatum und F. culmorum bestimmt, was die Komplexität der Wurzel- und Stängelfäuleerkrankung belegt. Analog zu diesem Ergebnis konnten im Vergleich zur Fruchtfolgevariante von den in dem Nachbauboden kultivierten Spargelpflanzen signifikant mehr Fusarium spp. (80%) isoliert werden. Das Wurzelwachstum war hier extrem reduziert. Unter diesen konduktiven Bedingungen gelang es durch Rhizombakterisierung (107 cfu/ml) mit B. subtilis FZB 42, eine signifikante Förderung des Wurzelwachstums relativ zur unbehandelten Kontrolle und zur B. subtilis FZB 37 Variante zu erzielen. In Pathogenitätstests konnten F. culmorum, F. oxysporum und F. proliferatum als bedeutende Spargelpathogene mit signifikant reduzierter Trieb- und Wurzelmasse nachgewiesen werden, während F. acuminatum nur geringe Symptome verursachte. Eine bakterielle Saatgutbeizung (108 cfu/ml) und zusätzliche präinfektionelle Gießapplikation (107 cfu/ml) konnte eine Infektion mit F. oxysporum f.sp. asparagi nicht verhindern. Dennoch waren die negativen Effekte im Vergleich mit der nicht bakterisierten Kontrolle in den B. subtilis Varianten FZB 24 und vor allem bei FZB 42 deutlich kompensiert. Diese Ergebnisse lassen vermuten, dass eine Resistenz- bzw. Toleranzinduktion ein potentieller Wirkmechanismus der Bakterien ist. In den Feldversuchen erbrachte eine Bakterisierung einjähriger Rhizome (107 cfu/ml) zur Pflanzung und ergänzende Gießbehandlungen (108 cfu/ml/1l/m) in den folgenden 2 Jahren eine tendenzielle Reduzierung der Trieblänge und des Triebdurchmessers, insbesondere in Kombination mit dem Algenpräparat. Einen eindeutigen Einfluss auf das Sortierungsergebnis konnte nicht nachgewiesen werden. Im Gegensatz hierzu resultierte eine Saatgutbakterisierung mit B. subtilis FZB 24 in einem generell geförderten Triebwachstum und einer signifikant gesteigerten Wurzelentwicklung. Auch die anderen Mikroorganismen erbrachten eine tendenzielle Wuchsförderung. Es konnte eine gesicherte Korrelation zwischen Wurzelmasse und Knospenanzahl ermittelt werden. Blattapplikationen mit Goemar Fruton Spezial® während der Hauptvegetationsphase hatten keinen Einfluss auf das Pflanzenwachstum. / The effects of the rhizobacteria Bacillus subtilis, Strain FZB 24, FZB 37and FZB 42, Bacillus pumilus RK 13, Streptomyces graminofaciens N6 and the alga Ascophyllum nodosum (Goemar Fruton Spezial®) on plant growth, yield and Fusarium spp. tolerance of Asparagus officinalis (L.) were investigated. The trials were carried out under field conditions over sev-eral years by sawing and planting and as pot trials in the greenhouse and climate chamber with soil naturally infested with Fusarium spp. and with steamed substrates inoculated with particularly Fusarium species. Asparagus replant soil was considerable higher infested with Fusarium spp. (56 %) than fresh soil without asparagus history (14 %). F. oxysporum was the most determined Fusarium species followed by F. redolens, F. acuminatum, F. culmorum, F. proliferatum, F. solani a.o.. That indicates the complex character of root and crown rot of asparagus. From asparagus plants cultivated in replant soil a significant higher rate of Fusarium isolations (80 %) could be worked out compared to the fresh soil treatment. The root growth in the contaminated soil was extremely reduced. In these conductive situation bacterial treatments with B. subtilis FZB 42 done as rhizom soaking (107cfu/ml) resulted in significantly increased root growth up to 32, 9 % related to the non treated control. B. subtilis FZB 37 was ineffective. F. oxysporum, F. culmorum and F. proliferatum showed a high pathogenicity to asparagus seedlings, manifested in significantly reduced fresh and dry weights of shoots and roots, while F. acuminatum caused only slight symptoms. None of the tested microorganisms applicated as seed coating (108 cfu/ml) and substrate drenching before pathogen inoculation (107 cfu/ml) could prevent seedlings from being infected by F. oxysporum f. sp. asparagi. The negative effects of infection are significantly compensated by Bacillus subtilis FZB 42 and FZB 24. The results support the conclusion, that induced tolerance is a potential mechanism of bacterial mode of action. Under field conditions rhizom bacterization of one year old asparagus plants (107 cfu/ml) before planting and additional soil drenching (108 cfu/ml/1,5l/m) during the following two years reduced shoot length, shoot diameter and yield, especially in combination with Goemar Fruton Spezial®. There was no remarkable influence on spear quality. Seed coating with B. subtilis FZB 24 (108 cfu/ml) and a soil drenching (108 cfu/ml/1l/m) in summer however re-sulted in higher shoots and significantly increased fresh weight and dry substance of roots. But also the other tested microorganisms showed a plant growth promoting trend. There was a significant positive correlation between root fresh weight and number of buds. By spraying the phylloclads four times during the main vegetation season the alga application only gave a slight improvement of plant growth in the field trials.

Page generated in 0.119 seconds