Cargando…

A Model to Explain Plant Growth Promotion Traits: A Multivariate Analysis of 2,211 Bacterial Isolates

Plant growth-promoting bacteria can greatly assist sustainable farming by improving plant health and biomass while reducing fertilizer use. The plant-microorganism-environment interaction is an open and complex system, and despite the active research in the area, patterns in root ecology are elusive...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: da Costa, Pedro Beschoren, Granada, Camille E., Ambrosini, Adriana, Moreira, Fernanda, de Souza, Rocheli, dos Passos, João Frederico M., Arruda, Letícia, Passaglia, Luciane M. P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4277451/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25542031
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116020
_version_ 1782350399576997888
author da Costa, Pedro Beschoren
Granada, Camille E.
Ambrosini, Adriana
Moreira, Fernanda
de Souza, Rocheli
dos Passos, João Frederico M.
Arruda, Letícia
Passaglia, Luciane M. P.
author_facet da Costa, Pedro Beschoren
Granada, Camille E.
Ambrosini, Adriana
Moreira, Fernanda
de Souza, Rocheli
dos Passos, João Frederico M.
Arruda, Letícia
Passaglia, Luciane M. P.
author_sort da Costa, Pedro Beschoren
collection PubMed
description Plant growth-promoting bacteria can greatly assist sustainable farming by improving plant health and biomass while reducing fertilizer use. The plant-microorganism-environment interaction is an open and complex system, and despite the active research in the area, patterns in root ecology are elusive. Here, we simultaneously analyzed the plant growth-promoting bacteria datasets from seven independent studies that shared a methodology for bioprospection and phenotype screening. The soil richness of the isolate's origin was classified by a Principal Component Analysis. A Categorical Principal Component Analysis was used to classify the soil richness according to isolate's indolic compound production, siderophores production and phosphate solubilization abilities, and bacterial genera composition. Multiple patterns and relationships were found and verified with nonparametric hypothesis testing. Including niche colonization in the analysis, we proposed a model to explain the expression of bacterial plant growth-promoting traits according to the soil nutritional status. Our model shows that plants favor interaction with growth hormone producers under rich nutrient conditions but favor nutrient solubilizers under poor conditions. We also performed several comparisons among the different genera, highlighting interesting ecological interactions and limitations. Our model could be used to direct plant growth-promoting bacteria bioprospection and metagenomic sampling.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4277451
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-42774512014-12-31 A Model to Explain Plant Growth Promotion Traits: A Multivariate Analysis of 2,211 Bacterial Isolates da Costa, Pedro Beschoren Granada, Camille E. Ambrosini, Adriana Moreira, Fernanda de Souza, Rocheli dos Passos, João Frederico M. Arruda, Letícia Passaglia, Luciane M. P. PLoS One Research Article Plant growth-promoting bacteria can greatly assist sustainable farming by improving plant health and biomass while reducing fertilizer use. The plant-microorganism-environment interaction is an open and complex system, and despite the active research in the area, patterns in root ecology are elusive. Here, we simultaneously analyzed the plant growth-promoting bacteria datasets from seven independent studies that shared a methodology for bioprospection and phenotype screening. The soil richness of the isolate's origin was classified by a Principal Component Analysis. A Categorical Principal Component Analysis was used to classify the soil richness according to isolate's indolic compound production, siderophores production and phosphate solubilization abilities, and bacterial genera composition. Multiple patterns and relationships were found and verified with nonparametric hypothesis testing. Including niche colonization in the analysis, we proposed a model to explain the expression of bacterial plant growth-promoting traits according to the soil nutritional status. Our model shows that plants favor interaction with growth hormone producers under rich nutrient conditions but favor nutrient solubilizers under poor conditions. We also performed several comparisons among the different genera, highlighting interesting ecological interactions and limitations. Our model could be used to direct plant growth-promoting bacteria bioprospection and metagenomic sampling. Public Library of Science 2014-12-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4277451/ /pubmed/25542031 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116020 Text en © 2014 Costa et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
da Costa, Pedro Beschoren
Granada, Camille E.
Ambrosini, Adriana
Moreira, Fernanda
de Souza, Rocheli
dos Passos, João Frederico M.
Arruda, Letícia
Passaglia, Luciane M. P.
A Model to Explain Plant Growth Promotion Traits: A Multivariate Analysis of 2,211 Bacterial Isolates
title A Model to Explain Plant Growth Promotion Traits: A Multivariate Analysis of 2,211 Bacterial Isolates
title_full A Model to Explain Plant Growth Promotion Traits: A Multivariate Analysis of 2,211 Bacterial Isolates
title_fullStr A Model to Explain Plant Growth Promotion Traits: A Multivariate Analysis of 2,211 Bacterial Isolates
title_full_unstemmed A Model to Explain Plant Growth Promotion Traits: A Multivariate Analysis of 2,211 Bacterial Isolates
title_short A Model to Explain Plant Growth Promotion Traits: A Multivariate Analysis of 2,211 Bacterial Isolates
title_sort model to explain plant growth promotion traits: a multivariate analysis of 2,211 bacterial isolates
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4277451/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25542031
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0116020
work_keys_str_mv AT dacostapedrobeschoren amodeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT granadacamillee amodeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT ambrosiniadriana amodeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT moreirafernanda amodeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT desouzarocheli amodeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT dospassosjoaofredericom amodeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT arrudaleticia amodeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT passaglialucianemp amodeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT dacostapedrobeschoren modeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT granadacamillee modeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT ambrosiniadriana modeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT moreirafernanda modeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT desouzarocheli modeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT dospassosjoaofredericom modeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT arrudaleticia modeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates
AT passaglialucianemp modeltoexplainplantgrowthpromotiontraitsamultivariateanalysisof2211bacterialisolates