Publication | Closed Access
Colonization of sugarcane by Acetobacter diazotrophicus is inhibited by high N-fertilization
168
Citations
32
References
1999
Year
BiologyEngineeringElectron MicroscopyAcetobacter DiazotrophicusPlant-microbe InteractionEndophyte ResearchMicrobial PhysiologyPlant PathologyMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyHigh N-fertilizationMicrobiologyPlant EndophytesSoil MicrobiologyMedicinePlant PhysiologyA. Diazotrophicus
Acetobacter diazotrophicus is a nitrogen-fixing endophytic bacterium, originally isolated from sugarcane. Its colonizing ability was evaluated in high and low N-fertilized sugarcane plants by inoculating stem-cuts with a β-glucuronidase marked A. diazotrophicus strain. Bacterial quantification by the most probable number technique showed a severe decrease of A. diazotrophicus cells in plants fertilized with high levels of nitrogen. The inoculated strain was detected inside low N-fertilized sugarcane plants by histochemical staining of β-glucuronidase and scanning electron microscopy. A. diazotrophicus was found mainly inside cortical cells of stems and inside xylem vessels. No β-glucuronidase activity was observed in non-inoculated plants. High nitrogen fertilization of fields might be a threat to maintaining naturally occurring endophytic associations.
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