Isolation of Aquatic Plant Growth-Promoting Bacteria for the Floating Plant Duckweed ( Lemna minor ).
Ayaka MakinoRyosuke NakaiYasuko YonedaTadashi ToyamaYasuhiro TanakaXian-Ying MengKazuhiro MoriMichihiko IkeMasaaki MorikawaYoichi KamagataHideyuki TamakiPublished in: Microorganisms (2022)
Plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB) can exert beneficial growth effects on their host plants. Little is known about the phylogeny and growth-promoting mechanisms of PGPB associated with aquatic plants, although those of terrestrial PGPB have been well-studied. Here, we report four novel aquatic PGPB strains, MRB1-4 (NITE P-01645-P-01648), for duckweed Lemna minor from our rhizobacterial collection isolated from Lythrum anceps . The number of L. minor fronds during 14 days co-culture with the strains MRB1-4 increased by 2.1-3.8-fold, compared with an uninoculated control; the plant biomass and chlorophyll content in co-cultures also increased. Moreover, all strains possessed an indole-3-acetic acid production trait in common with a plant growth-promoting trait of terrestrial PGPB. Phylogenetic analysis showed that three strains, MRB-1, -3, and -4, were affiliated with known proteobacterial genera ( Bradyrhizobium and Pelomonas ); this report is the first to describe a plant-growth promoting activity of Pelomonas members. The gammaproteobacterial strain MRB2 was suggested to be phylogenetically novel at the genus level. Under microscopic observation, the Pelomonas strain MRB3 was epiphytic and adhered to both the root surfaces and fronds of duckweed. The duckweed PGPB obtained here could serve as a new model for understanding unforeseen mechanisms behind aquatic plant-microbe interactions.