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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, October 1999, p. 4320-4328, Vol. 65, No. 10
Section of Genetics and Microbiology,
Department of Ecology, The Royal Veterinary and Agricultural
University, DK-1871 Frederiksberg C (Copenhagen), Denmark
Received 16 March 1999/Accepted 28 July 1999
The availability of nitrogen to Pseudomonas fluorescens
DF57 during straw degradation in bulk soil and in barley rhizosphere was studied by introducing a bioluminescent reporter strain (DF57-N3), responding to nitrogen limitation, to model systems of varying complexity. DF57-N3 was apparently not nitrogen limited in the natural
and sterilized bulk soil used for these experiments. The soil was
subsequently amended with barley straw, representing a plant residue
with a high carbon-to-nitrogen ratio (between 60 and 100). In these
systems the DF57-N3 population gradually developed a nitrogen
limitation response during the first week of straw decomposition, but
exclusively in the presence of the indigenous microbial population.
This probably reflects the restricted ability of DF57 to degrade plant
polymers by hydrolytic enzymes. The impact of the indigenous population
on nitrogen availability to DF57-N3 was mimicked by the cellulolytic
organism Trichoderma harzianum Rifai strain T3 when
coinoculated with DF57-N3 in sterilized, straw-amended soil. Limitation
occurred concomitantly with fungal cellulase production, pointing to
the significance of hydrolytic activity for the mobilization of straw
carbon sources, thereby increasing the nitrogen demand. Enhanced
survival of DF57-N3 in natural soil after straw amendment further
indicated that DF57 was cross-fed with carbon/energy sources. The
natural barley rhizosphere was experienced by DF57-N3 as an environment
with restricted nitrogen availability regardless of straw amendment. In
the rhizosphere of plants grown in sterilized soil, nitrogen limitation
was less severe, pointing to competition with indigenous microorganisms as an important determinant of the nitrogen status for DF57-N3 in this
environment. Hence, these studies have demonstrated that nitrogen
availability and gene expression in Pseudomonas is
intimately linked to the structure and function of the microbial
community. Further, it was demonstrated that the activities of
cellulolytic microorganisms may affect the availability of energy and
specific nutrients to a group of organisms deficient in hydrolytic
enzyme activities.
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Nitrogen Availability to Pseudomonas
fluorescens DF57 Is Limited during Decomposition of Barley
Straw in Bulk Soil and in the Barley Rhizosphere
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Section of
Genetics and Microbiology, Department of Ecology, The Royal Veterinary
and Agricultural University, Thorvaldsensvej 40, DK-1871 Frederiksberg C (Copenhagen), Denmark. Phone: 45 35 28 26 44. Fax: 45 35 28 26 06. E-mail: Linda.E.Jensen{at}ecol.kvl.dk.
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