4.4 Article

Plant Growth-Promoting Rhizobacteria Modulate the Concentration of Bioactive Compounds in Tomato Fruits

Journal

SEPARATIONS
Volume 8, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/separations8110223

Keywords

plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR); tomato; lycopene; functional food; ROS; bioactive compounds

Funding

  1. Regional Government of Andalusia [P11-CVI-7050]
  2. Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad [AGL2016-75413-P, AGL2016-77163-R, BIO2016-78409-R]

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This study found that the effects of rhizobacteria on different tomato cultivars varied, with Tres Cantos plants producing larger fruits with more lycopene but less biomass after inoculation, while cherry plants showed no change in biomass but higher lipid peroxidation.
Background: The application of microorganisms as bioestimulants in order to increase the yield and/or quality of agricultural products is becoming a widely used practice in many countries. In this work, five plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR), isolated from cultivated rice paddy soils, were selected for their plant growth-promoting capacities (e.g., auxin synthesis, chitinase activity, phosphate solubilisation and siderophores production). Two different tomato cultivars were inoculated, Tres Cantos and cherry. Plants were grown under greenhouse conditions and different phenotypic characteristics were analysed at the time of harvesting. Results: Tres Cantos plants inoculated with PGPR produced less biomass but larger fruits. However, the photosynthetic rate was barely affected. Several antioxidant activities were upregulated in these plants, and no oxidative damage in terms of lipid peroxidation was observed. Finally, ripe fruits accumulated less sugar but, interestingly, more lycopene. By contrast, inoculation of cherry plants with PGPR had no effect on biomass, although photosynthesis was slightly affected, and the productivity was similar to the control plants. In addition, antioxidant activities were downregulated and a higher lipid peroxidation was detected. However, neither sugar nor lycopene accumulation was altered. Conclusion: These results support the use of microorganisms isolated from agricultural soils as interesting tools to manipulate the level of important bioactive molecules in plants. However, this effect seems to be very specific, even at the variety level, and deeper analyses are necessary to assess their use for specific applications.

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