4.7 Article

Plant Growth Promotion at Low Temperature by Phosphate-Solubilizing Pseudomonas Spp. Isolated from High-Altitude Himalayan Soil

Journal

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 82, Issue 3, Pages 677-687

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00248-021-01702-1

Keywords

Low temperature; Plant growth promotion; Arabidopsis thaliana; Fluorescence microscopy; Indian Himalayan region

Funding

  1. National Mission on Himalayan Studies Fellowship under Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Govt. of India, New Delhi

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Limited arable land, nutrient availability, and low temperatures in the Himalayan regions require sustainable management practices to improve crop yields. This study investigated the ability of psychrotolerant Pseudomonas spp. from the Indian Himalayas to solubilize phosphate at low temperatures, showing promising results for ecofriendly plant growth promotion in cold environments.
Scarcity of arable land, limited soil nutrient availability, and low-temperature conditions in the Himalayan regions need to be smartly managed using sustainable approaches for better crop yields. Microorganisms, able to efficiently solubilize phosphate at low temperatures, provide an opportunity to promote plant growth in an ecofriendly way. In this study, we have investigated the ability of psychrotolerant Pseudomonas spp., isolated from high altitudes of Indian Himalaya to solubilize P at low temperature. Quantitative estimation of phosphate solubilization and production of relevant enzymes at two different temperatures (15 and 25 degrees C) was performed for 4 out of 11 selected isolates, namely, GBPI_506 (Pseudomonas sp.), GBPI_508 (Pseudomonas palleroniana), GBPI_Hb61 (Pseudomonas proteolytica), and GBPI_CDB143 (Pseudomonas azotoformans). Among all, isolate GBPI_CDB143 showed highest efficiency to solubilize tri-calcium phosphate (110.50 +/- 3.44 mu g/mL) at 25 degrees C after 6 days while the culture supernatants of isolate GBPI_506 displayed the highest phytase activity (15.91 +/- 0.35 U/mL) at 15 degrees C and alkaline phosphatase (3.09 +/- 0.07 U/mL) at 25 degrees C in 6 and 9 days, respectively. Out of five different organic acids quantified, oxalic acid and malic acid were produced in maximum quantity by all four isolates. With the exception of GBPI_508, inoculation of bacteria promoted overall growth (rosette diameter, leaf area, and biomass) of Arabidopsis thaliana plants as compared to uninoculated control plants in growth chamber conditions. The plant growth promotion by each bacterial isolate was further validated by monitoring root colonization in the inoculated plants. These bacterial isolates with low-temperature phosphate solubilization potential along with phosphatases and phytase activity at low temperature could be harnessed for sustainable crop production in P-deficient agricultural soils under mountain ecosystems.

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