How do rhizobacterial volatiles influence root system architecture, biomass production and allocation of the model grass Brachypodium distachyon?

Activity: Talk or presentationConference PresentationsResearch

Pierre Delaplace - Speaker

Elena Ormeno-Lafuente - Speaker

Minh Nguyen - Speaker

Benjamin Delory - Speaker

Caroline Baudson - Speaker

Magdalena Mendaluk Saunier de Cazenave - Speaker

Stijn Spaepen - Speaker

Sébastien Varin - Speaker

Yves Brostaux - Speaker

Patrick du Jardin - Speaker

Plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria are increasingly considered as a complement of conventional inputs in agricultural systems. Their effects on their host plants are diverse and include volatile-mediated growth enhancement. The present study aims at assessing the effects of bacterial volatile production on the biomass production and the root system architecture of Brachypodium distachyon (L.) Beauv. (line Bd-21). An in vitro experimental set-up allowing plant-bacteria interaction through the gaseous phase without any physical contact was used to screen 19 bacterial strains for their growth promotion ability over a 10-day cocultivation period.
Using principal component analysis followed by hierarchical clustering and two-way analysis of variance, five groups of bacteria were defined and characterized based on their combined influence on biomass production and root system architecture. The observed effects range from unchanged to highly increased biomass production coupled with increased root length and branching. Primary root length was only increased by the volatile compounds emitted by Enterobacter cloacae JM22 and Bacillus pumilus T4. Overall, the most significant results were obtained with Bacillus subtilis GB03 which induced a 81% increase in total biomass and enhanced total root length, total secondary root length and total adventitious root length by 88, 196 and 473% respectively.
The analysis of the emission kinetics of bacterial volatile organic compounds is underway and should lead to the identification of volatile compounds candidates responsible for the observed growth promotion effects. Taking into account the inherent characteristics of our in vitro system, the next experimental steps are identified and discussed from a fundamental and applied viewpoint.
12.01.2016

Event

Plant & Animal Genome Conference - PAG XXIV 2016: The Largest Ag-Genomics Meeting in the World

09.01.1613.01.16

San Diego, United States

Event: Conference

Recently viewed

Publications

  1. Decoding evidence-based entrepreneurship
  2. Cascaded Backstepping Control for a Permanent Magnet Linear Motor using a Dual Kalman Filter
  3. Identification of floodplain contamination hot spots by reconstructing Elbe river pollution load history and high flood sediment distribution during inundation.
  4. Towards a Better Understanding of the Phenomenon of "Adolescent Struggling Readers"
  5. Liniennetzpläne
  6. You again Obsessive repeated Encounters in the Work of Rosamunde Pitcher and Leo Tolstoy
  7. Uncertainty, Pluralism, and the Knowledge-based Theory of the Firm
  8. Variation in short-term and long-term responses of photosynthesis and isoprenoid-mediated photoprotection to soil water availability in four Douglas-fir provenances
  9. Fulfillment of Heterogeneous Customer Delivery Times through Decoupling the Production and Accelerating Production Orders
  10. Luhmann-Handbuch
  11. Germany: Cooperation with Silver Workers – Individual aspects and basic framework conditions
  12. Reconstructing the “biopiracy” debate from a justice perspective
  13. Typewriting Dynamics
  14. Comparative study of microstructure and texture of cast and homogenized TX32 magnesium alloy after hot deformation
  15. Cross-level Information and Influence in Mandated Participatory Planning: Alternative Pathways to Sustainable Water Management in Germany’s Implementation of the EU Water Framework Directive
  16. Arc spraying of WCFeCSiMn cored wires.
  17. (Un)Bestimmtheit
  18. Different sizes, similar challenges
  19. Evaluation of Magnesium Die-Casting Alloys for Elevated Temperature Applications
  20. Article 5: Contracts of carriage
  21. Research-Creation
  22. High temperature mechanical behavior of an extruded Mg-11Gd-4.5Y-1Nd-1.5Zn-0.5Zr (wt%) alloy
  23. Current overview of research on priority effects and its relevance to restoration
  24. Post-foundationalism and the Possibility of Critique
  25. Development of competencies across the life span
  26. Climate change as an element of sustainability communication
  27. Mitarbeitergespräch
  28. "Stürmische Plötzlichkeiten"