Affiliation:
1. Soil Microbial Systems Laboratory, Agricultural Research Service, USDA, Building 318 BARC-East, 10300 Baltimore Avenue, Beltsville, Maryland 20705-2350
Abstract
Detection in the rhizosphere of the siderophore produced by an inoculated microorganism is critical to determining the role of microbial iron chelators on plant growth promotion. We previously reported the development of monoclonal antibodies (MAb) to ferric pseudobactin, the siderophore of plant-growth-promoting
Pseudomonas
strain B10. One of these MAb reacted less strongly to pseudobactin than to ferric pseudobactin. The MAb reacted to Al(III), Cr(III), Cu(II), and Mn(II) complexes of pseudobactin at a level similar to the level at which it reacted to ferric pseudobactin and reacted less to the Zn(II) complex, but these metals would make up only a small fraction of chelated pseudobactin in soil on the basis of relative abundance of metals and relative binding constants. Fourteen-day-old barley plants grown in limed and autoclaved soil were inoculated with 10
9
CFU of
Pseudomonas
strain Sm1-3, a strain of
Pseudomonas
B10 Rif
r
Nal
r
selected for enhanced colonization, and sampled 3 days later. Extraction and analysis of the roots and surrounding soil using the MAb in an immunoassay indicated a concentration of 3.5 � 10
-10
mol of ferric pseudobacting g
-1
(wet weight). This is the first direct measurement of a pseudobactin siderophore in soil or rhizosphere samples.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
36 articles.
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