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Pseudomonas fluorescens PICF7 displays an endophytic lifestyle in cultivated cereals and enhances yield in barley.

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY(2016)

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Abstract
Pseudomonas fluorescens PICF7, an indigenous inhabitant of olive roots, displays an endophytic lifestyle in this woody crop and exerts biocontrol against the fungal phytopathogenVerticillium dahliae. Here we report microscopy evidence that the strain PICF7 is also able to colonize and persist on or in wheat and barley root tissues. Root colonization of both cereal species followed a similar pattern to that previously reported in olive, including inner colonization of the root hairs. This demonstrates that strain PICF7 can colonize root systems of distant botanical species. Barley plants germinated from PICF7-treated seeds showed enhanced vegetative growth. Moreover, significant increases in the number of grains (up to 19.5%) and grain weight (up to 20.5%) per plant were scored in this species. In contrast, growth and yield were not significantly affected in wheat plants by the presence of PICF7. Proteomics analysis of the root systems revealed that different proteins were exclusively found depending on the presence or absence of PICF7 and only one protein with hydrogen ion transmembrane transporter activity was exclusively found in both PICF7-inoculated barley and wheat plants but not in the controls.Colonization and plant growth promotion abilities of the endophytic bacteriumPseudomonas fluorescens PICF7 in barley and wheat.Colonization and plant growth promotion abilities of the endophytic bacteriumPseudomonas fluorescens PICF7 in barley and wheat.
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Key words
confocal laser scanning microscopy,olive,plant-growth promotion,proteomics,root colonization,wheat
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