Nature BiotechnologyArchiveSearchInformationClassifiedSubscribe

RESEARCH ARTICLES



April 1997
Table of
Contents
 

April 1997 Volume 15 Number 4 p363
 
 
Modification of rhizobacterial populations by engineering bacterium utilization of a novel plant-produced resource
Michael A. Savka and Stephen K. Farrand1,*
 
Department of Biology, University of West Florida, Pensacola, FL 32514, and 1Department of Crop Sciences, and Microbiology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801. *Corresponding author (e-mail: stephenf@uiuc.edu).

The ability to catabolize distinct nutrients produced by a plant may be a factor in the successful colonization of that host by a bacterium when in competition with other rhizosphere microorganisms. We tested this hypothesis by examining the influence of a novel substrate produced by a transgenic plant on root colonization by near-isogenic bacteria, differing only in their ability to use the resource. When inoculated alone, both bacteria colonized the roots of the normal and transgenic plants with equal kinetics and to indistinguishable levels. When the two bacteria were coinoculated, the catabolizer reached a population density significantly higher than that of the noncatabolizer on the roots of the resource-producing plant. No such advantage was observed on the roots of normal plants. These results support the theory that resources produced and exuded by a plant host can confer a selective advantage to microorganisms that use the substrate.


 

Home

Site GuideFeedback