Cargando…

Role of Bacillus cereus in Improving the Growth and Phytoextractability of Brassica nigra (L.) K. Koch in Chromium Contaminated Soil

Plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) mediate heavy metal tolerance and improve phytoextraction potential in plants. The present research was conducted to find the potential of bacterial strains in improving the growth and phytoextraction abilities of Brassica nigra (L.) K. Koch. in chromium c...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Akhtar, Nosheen, Ilyas, Noshin, Yasmin, Humaira, Sayyed, R. Z., Hasnain, Zuhair, A. Elsayed, Elsayed, El Enshasy, Hesham A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7998664/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33809305
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26061569
_version_ 1783670604383125504
author Akhtar, Nosheen
Ilyas, Noshin
Yasmin, Humaira
Sayyed, R. Z.
Hasnain, Zuhair
A. Elsayed, Elsayed
El Enshasy, Hesham A.
author_facet Akhtar, Nosheen
Ilyas, Noshin
Yasmin, Humaira
Sayyed, R. Z.
Hasnain, Zuhair
A. Elsayed, Elsayed
El Enshasy, Hesham A.
author_sort Akhtar, Nosheen
collection PubMed
description Plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) mediate heavy metal tolerance and improve phytoextraction potential in plants. The present research was conducted to find the potential of bacterial strains in improving the growth and phytoextraction abilities of Brassica nigra (L.) K. Koch. in chromium contaminated soil. In this study, a total of 15 bacterial strains were isolated from heavy metal polluted soil and were screened for their heavy metal tolerance and plant growth promotion potential. The most efficient strain was identified by 16S rRNA gene sequencing and was identified as Bacillus cereus. The isolate also showed the potential to solubilize phosphate and synthesize siderophore, phytohormones (indole acetic acid, cytokinin, and abscisic acid), and osmolyte (proline and sugar) in chromium (Cr(+3)) supplemented medium. The results of the present study showed that chromium stress has negative effects on seed germination and plant growth in B. nigra while inoculation of B. cereus improved plant growth and reduced chromium toxicity. The increase in seed germination percentage, shoot length, and root length was 28.07%, 35.86%, 19.11% while the fresh and dry biomass of the plant increased by 48.00% and 62.16%, respectively, as compared to the uninoculated/control plants. The photosynthetic pigments were also improved by bacterial inoculation as compared to untreated stress-exposed plants, i.e., increase in chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b, chlorophyll a + b, and carotenoid was d 25.94%, 10.65%, 20.35%, and 44.30%, respectively. Bacterial inoculation also resulted in osmotic adjustment (proline 8.76% and sugar 28.71%) and maintained the membrane stability (51.39%) which was also indicated by reduced malondialdehyde content (59.53% decrease). The antioxidant enzyme activities were also improved to 35.90% (superoxide dismutase), 59.61% (peroxide), and 33.33% (catalase) in inoculated stress-exposed plants as compared to the control plants. B. cereus inoculation also improved the uptake, bioaccumulation, and translocation of Cr in the plant. Data showed that B. cereus also increased Cr content in the root (2.71-fold) and shoot (4.01-fold), its bioaccumulation (2.71-fold in root and 4.03-fold in the shoot) and translocation (40%) was also high in B. nigra. The data revealed that B. cereus is a multifarious PGPR that efficiently tolerates heavy metal ions (Cr(+3)) and it can be used to enhance the growth and phytoextraction potential of B. nigra in heavy metal contaminated soil.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7998664
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-79986642021-03-28 Role of Bacillus cereus in Improving the Growth and Phytoextractability of Brassica nigra (L.) K. Koch in Chromium Contaminated Soil Akhtar, Nosheen Ilyas, Noshin Yasmin, Humaira Sayyed, R. Z. Hasnain, Zuhair A. Elsayed, Elsayed El Enshasy, Hesham A. Molecules Article Plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) mediate heavy metal tolerance and improve phytoextraction potential in plants. The present research was conducted to find the potential of bacterial strains in improving the growth and phytoextraction abilities of Brassica nigra (L.) K. Koch. in chromium contaminated soil. In this study, a total of 15 bacterial strains were isolated from heavy metal polluted soil and were screened for their heavy metal tolerance and plant growth promotion potential. The most efficient strain was identified by 16S rRNA gene sequencing and was identified as Bacillus cereus. The isolate also showed the potential to solubilize phosphate and synthesize siderophore, phytohormones (indole acetic acid, cytokinin, and abscisic acid), and osmolyte (proline and sugar) in chromium (Cr(+3)) supplemented medium. The results of the present study showed that chromium stress has negative effects on seed germination and plant growth in B. nigra while inoculation of B. cereus improved plant growth and reduced chromium toxicity. The increase in seed germination percentage, shoot length, and root length was 28.07%, 35.86%, 19.11% while the fresh and dry biomass of the plant increased by 48.00% and 62.16%, respectively, as compared to the uninoculated/control plants. The photosynthetic pigments were also improved by bacterial inoculation as compared to untreated stress-exposed plants, i.e., increase in chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b, chlorophyll a + b, and carotenoid was d 25.94%, 10.65%, 20.35%, and 44.30%, respectively. Bacterial inoculation also resulted in osmotic adjustment (proline 8.76% and sugar 28.71%) and maintained the membrane stability (51.39%) which was also indicated by reduced malondialdehyde content (59.53% decrease). The antioxidant enzyme activities were also improved to 35.90% (superoxide dismutase), 59.61% (peroxide), and 33.33% (catalase) in inoculated stress-exposed plants as compared to the control plants. B. cereus inoculation also improved the uptake, bioaccumulation, and translocation of Cr in the plant. Data showed that B. cereus also increased Cr content in the root (2.71-fold) and shoot (4.01-fold), its bioaccumulation (2.71-fold in root and 4.03-fold in the shoot) and translocation (40%) was also high in B. nigra. The data revealed that B. cereus is a multifarious PGPR that efficiently tolerates heavy metal ions (Cr(+3)) and it can be used to enhance the growth and phytoextraction potential of B. nigra in heavy metal contaminated soil. MDPI 2021-03-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7998664/ /pubmed/33809305 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26061569 Text en © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Akhtar, Nosheen
Ilyas, Noshin
Yasmin, Humaira
Sayyed, R. Z.
Hasnain, Zuhair
A. Elsayed, Elsayed
El Enshasy, Hesham A.
Role of Bacillus cereus in Improving the Growth and Phytoextractability of Brassica nigra (L.) K. Koch in Chromium Contaminated Soil
title Role of Bacillus cereus in Improving the Growth and Phytoextractability of Brassica nigra (L.) K. Koch in Chromium Contaminated Soil
title_full Role of Bacillus cereus in Improving the Growth and Phytoextractability of Brassica nigra (L.) K. Koch in Chromium Contaminated Soil
title_fullStr Role of Bacillus cereus in Improving the Growth and Phytoextractability of Brassica nigra (L.) K. Koch in Chromium Contaminated Soil
title_full_unstemmed Role of Bacillus cereus in Improving the Growth and Phytoextractability of Brassica nigra (L.) K. Koch in Chromium Contaminated Soil
title_short Role of Bacillus cereus in Improving the Growth and Phytoextractability of Brassica nigra (L.) K. Koch in Chromium Contaminated Soil
title_sort role of bacillus cereus in improving the growth and phytoextractability of brassica nigra (l.) k. koch in chromium contaminated soil
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7998664/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33809305
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26061569
work_keys_str_mv AT akhtarnosheen roleofbacilluscereusinimprovingthegrowthandphytoextractabilityofbrassicanigralkkochinchromiumcontaminatedsoil
AT ilyasnoshin roleofbacilluscereusinimprovingthegrowthandphytoextractabilityofbrassicanigralkkochinchromiumcontaminatedsoil
AT yasminhumaira roleofbacilluscereusinimprovingthegrowthandphytoextractabilityofbrassicanigralkkochinchromiumcontaminatedsoil
AT sayyedrz roleofbacilluscereusinimprovingthegrowthandphytoextractabilityofbrassicanigralkkochinchromiumcontaminatedsoil
AT hasnainzuhair roleofbacilluscereusinimprovingthegrowthandphytoextractabilityofbrassicanigralkkochinchromiumcontaminatedsoil
AT aelsayedelsayed roleofbacilluscereusinimprovingthegrowthandphytoextractabilityofbrassicanigralkkochinchromiumcontaminatedsoil
AT elenshasyheshama roleofbacilluscereusinimprovingthegrowthandphytoextractabilityofbrassicanigralkkochinchromiumcontaminatedsoil