4.3 Article

Unravelling the potential of microbes isolated from rhizospheric soil of chickpea (Cicer arietinum) as plant growth promoter

Journal

3 BIOTECH
Volume 9, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s13205-019-1809-2

Keywords

ACC deaminase; Biofertilizer; Indole acetic acid; PGPR; Rhizosphere; ACC deaminase

Funding

  1. Department of Science and Technology-Science and Engineering Research Board (DST-SERB) [ECR/2017/000080]

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In the present study, the Cicer arietinum (chickpea) rhizosphere bacterial strains Azotobacter chroococcum (AU-1), Bacillus subtilis (AU-2), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (AU-3) and Bacillus pumilis (AU-4) were isolated and characterized for plant growth-promoting traits with an aim of developing bio-fertilizing agent to improve growth and yield of chickpea plants under normal conditions. The ACC degrading potential of strains AU-1, AU-2, AU-3, and AU-4 was in the range of 600-1700nmol -ketobutyrate per mg of cellular protein per hour, respectively. These four rhizobacteria exhibited Indole acetic acid production approximately between 20 and 35.34 mu g/ml. The phosphate solubilization potential was in the range of 78-87.64mg Soluble P/L with maximum solubilization displayed by strains P. aeruginosa and B. pumilis. All the growth-promoting isolates displayed Fe-chelating siderophore and ammonia production while no isolate was able to produce hydrocyanic acid. Besides evaluating the presence of multifaceted in vitro plant growth-promoting traits, these four rhizobacterial isolates were halotolerant as well as water stress (drought) tolerant of up to -1.2Mpa of PEG 6000. The optimum pH and temperature for their growth were found to be pH 7 and 30 degrees C temperature. Under normal conditions, inoculation with formulated bacterial consortia significantly improved the (P0.05) germination index, plant height, leaf area index, stem diameter, and chlorophyll content by similar to 50%, 100%, 63%, 185%, and 63%, respectively, as compared to uninoculated chickpea plants. The consortia of halotolerant and drought tolerant bacterial strains were shown to exert a positive impact on the growth of chickpea plants under normal conditions.

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