The synergy of halotolerant PGPB and mauran mitigates salt stress in tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) via osmoprotectants accumulation

Author:

Sánchez Patricia1,Castro‐Cegrí Alejandro2,Sierra Sandra2,Garrido Dolores2,Llamas Inmaculada13,Sampedro Inmaculada13ORCID,Palma Francisco2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Microbiology, Pharmacy Faculty University of Granada Spain

2. Department of Plant Physiology, Science Faculty University of Granada Granada Spain

3. Biomedical Research Center (CIBM) Biotechnology Institute Granada Spain

Abstract

AbstractSalinity stress is one of the major abiotic factors limiting sustainable agriculture. Halotolerant plant growth‐promoting bacteria (PGPB) increased salt stress tolerance in plants, but the mechanisms underlying the tolerance are poorly understood. This study investigated the PGP activity of four halotolerant bacteria under salinity stress and the tomato salt‐tolerance mechanisms induced by the synergy of these bacteria with the exopolysaccharide (EPS) mauran. All PGPB tested in this study were able to offer a significant improvement of tomato plant biomass under salinity stress; Peribacillus castrilensis N3 being the most efficient one. Tomato plants treated with N3 and the EPS mauran showed greater tolerance to NaCl than the treatment in the absence of EPS and PGPB. The synergy of N3 with mauran confers salt stress tolerance in tomato plants by increasing sodium transporter genes' expression and osmoprotectant content, including soluble sugars, polyols, proline, GABA, phenols and the polyamine putrescine. These osmolytes together with the induction of sodium transporter genes increase the osmotic adjustment capacity to resist water loss and maintain ionic homeostasis. These findings suggest that the synergy of the halotolerant bacterium N3 and the EPS mauran could enhance tomato plant growth by mitigating salt stress and could have great potential as an inductor of salinity tolerance in the agriculture sector.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science,Genetics,General Medicine,Physiology

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