Publication | Open Access
Oxygen-Sensing Reporter Strain of <i>Pseudomonas fluorescens</i> for Monitoring the Distribution of Low-Oxygen Habitats in Soil
108
Citations
50
References
1999
Year
EngineeringBacteriologyMolecular BiologyEscherichia ColiMicrobial PhysiologyBacterial PathogensLow-oxygen HabitatsMicrobial EcologySoil MicrobiologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyOxygen ConcentrationsAerobic CulturingSoil OrganismOxygen ConcentrationBiochemistryMolecular MicrobiologyBiotechnologyOxygen-sensing Reporter StrainMicrobiologyMedicineMicrobial Genetics
ABSTRACT The root-colonizing bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens CHA0 was used to construct an oxygen-responsive biosensor. An anaerobically inducible promoter of Pseudomonas aeruginosa , which depends on the FNR (fumarate and nitrate reductase regulation)-like transcriptional regulator ANR (anaerobic regulation of arginine deiminase and nitrate reductase pathways), was fused to the structural lacZ gene of Escherichia coli . By inserting the reporter fusion into the chromosomal att Tn 7 site of P. fluorescens CHA0 by using a mini-Tn 7 transposon, the reporter strain, CHA900, was obtained. Grown in glutamate-yeast extract medium in an oxystat at defined oxygen levels, the biosensor CHA900 responded to a decrease in oxygen concentration from 210 × 10 2 Pa to 2 × 10 2 Pa of O 2 by a nearly 100-fold increase in β-galactosidase activity. Half-maximal induction of the reporter occurred at about 5 × 10 2 Pa. This dose response closely resembles that found for E. coli promoters which are activated by the FNR protein. In a carbon-free buffer or in bulk soil, the biosensor CHA900 still responded to a decrease in oxygen concentration, although here induction was about 10 times lower and the low oxygen response was gradually lost within 3 days. Introduced into a barley-soil microcosm, the biosensor could report decreasing oxygen concentrations in the rhizosphere for a 6-day period. When the water content in the microcosm was raised from 60% to 85% of field capacity, expression of the reporter gene was elevated about twofold above a basal level after 2 days of incubation, suggesting that a water content of 85% caused mild anoxia. Increased compaction of the soil was shown to have a faster and more dramatic effect on the expression of the oxygen reporter than soil water content alone, indicating that factors other than the water-filled pore space influenced the oxygen status of the soil. These experiments illustrate the utility of the biosensor for detecting low oxygen concentrations in the rhizosphere and other soil habitats.
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