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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., 01 1997, 99-105, Vol 63, No. 1
JE Loper and MD Henkels
The biological availability of iron in the rhizosphere was assessed by
evaluating ice nucleation activity (INA) expressed in situ by Pseudomonas
fluorescens Pf-5 containing a transcriptional fusion (pvd- inaZ) of an
iron-regulated promoter to an ice nucleation reporter gene (inaZ). Pf-5
containing pvd-inaZ expresses INA that is inversely related to the iron
availability of a growth medium (J. E. Loper and S. E. Lindow, Appl.
Environ. Microbiol. 60:1934-1941, 1994). INA expressed by rhizosphere
populations of Pf-5 containing pvd-inaZ was at a maximum within 12 to 24 h
following inoculation of the bacterium onto bean roots and typically
decreased gradually during the following 4 days. Iron availability in the
soil, which was altered by the addition of chelators, influenced INA
expressed by rhizosphere populations of Pf-5 containing pvd-inaZ. In soil
adjusted to a pH of 7.0 or 8.0 by adding Ca(OH)2, rhizosphere populations
of Pf-5 containing pvd-inaZ expressed greater INA, indicating lower iron
availability, than they did in the nonamended soil at a pH of 5.4.
Similarly, rhizosphere populations of Pf-5 containing pvd-inaZ expressed
less INA in an agricultural soil of pH 5.4 than in other agricultural soils
ranging in pH from 6.4 to 7.7. These results conform to the predictions of
chemical models stating that pH is a major factor influencing iron
availability in soil solutions. The results of this study indicate that P.
fluorescens Pf-5 encountered an iron-limited environment immediately after
it was inoculated onto bean roots planted in agricultural field soils. One
to two days after the bacterium was inoculated onto root surfaces, however,
iron became more available to rhizosphere populations of Pf-5. We speculate
that iron acquisition systems of plants and other rhizosphere organisms may
provide available sources of iron to established rhizosphere populations of
P. fluorescens.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Availability of iron to Pseudomonas fluorescens in rhizosphere and bulk soil evaluated with an ice nucleation reporter gene
Horticultural Crops Research Laboratory, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Corvallis, Oregon 97330, USA. LoperJ@bcc.orst.edu
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