Selection of Specific Endophytic Bacterial Genotypes by Plants in Response to Soil Contamination

Steven D. Siciliano(Fisheries and Oceans Canada), Nathalie Fortin(Fisheries and Oceans Canada), Anca Mihoc(Fisheries and Oceans Canada), Gesine Wisse(Fisheries and Oceans Canada), Suzanne Labelle(Fisheries and Oceans Canada), Danielle Beaumier(Fisheries and Oceans Canada), Danielle Ouellette(Fisheries and Oceans Canada), Réal Roy(Fisheries and Oceans Canada), Lyle G. Whyte(Fisheries and Oceans Canada), M.K. Banks(Houston Methodist), A. P. Schwab(Purdue University West Lafayette), Ken Lee(CARE Canada), Charles W. Greer(Fisheries and Oceans Canada)
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
June 1, 2001
Cited by 371Open Access
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Abstract

Plant-bacterial combinations can increase contaminant degradation in the rhizosphere, but the role played by indigenous root-associated bacteria during plant growth in contaminated soils is unclear. The purpose of this study was to determine if plants had the ability to selectively enhance the prevalence of endophytes containing pollutant catabolic genes in unrelated environments contaminated with different pollutants. At petroleum hydrocarbon contaminated sites, two genes encoding hydrocarbon degradation, alkane monooxygenase (alkB) and naphthalene dioxygenase (ndoB), were two and four times more prevalent in bacteria extracted from the root interior (endophytic) than from the bulk soil and sediment, respectively. In field sites contaminated with nitroaromatics, two genes encoding nitrotoluene degradation, 2-nitrotoluene reductase (ntdAa) and nitrotoluene monooxygenase (ntnM), were 7 to 14 times more prevalent in endophytic bacteria. The addition of petroleum to sediment doubled the prevalence of ndoB-positive endophytes in Scirpus pungens, indicating that the numbers of endophytes containing catabolic genotypes were dependent on the presence and concentration of contaminants. Similarly, the numbers of alkB- or ndoB-positive endophytes in Festuca arundinacea were correlated with the concentration of creosote in the soil but not with the numbers of alkB- or ndoB-positive bacteria in the bulk soil. Our results indicate that the enrichment of catabolic genotypes in the root interior is both plant and contaminant dependent.


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