Involvement of siderophores in the reduction of metal-induced inhibition of auxin synthesis in Streptomyces spp

Unlike synthetic metal chelators, microbe-assisted phytoremediation provides plants with natural metal-solubilizing chelators which do not constitute a potential source of environmental pollution. Concurrently with microbial chelators, plant growth promotion can be enhanced through bacterially-produ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chemosphere (Oxford) 2008-12, Vol.74 (1), p.19-25
Hauptverfasser: Dimkpa, Christian O., Svatoš, Aleš, Dabrowska, Paulina, Schmidt, Andre, Boland, Wilhelm, Kothe, Erika
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Unlike synthetic metal chelators, microbe-assisted phytoremediation provides plants with natural metal-solubilizing chelators which do not constitute a potential source of environmental pollution. Concurrently with microbial chelators, plant growth promotion can be enhanced through bacterially-produced phytohormones. In this work, the simultaneous production of siderophores and auxins by Streptomyces was studied to gain insight for future application in plant growth and phytoremediation in a metal-contaminated soil. Standard auxin and siderophore detection assays indicated that all of the investigated Streptomyces strains can produce these metabolites simultaneously. However, Al 3+, Cd 2+, Cu 2+, Fe 3+ and Ni 2+, or a combination of Fe 3+ and Cd 2+, and Fe 3+ and Ni 2+ affected auxin production negatively, as revealed by spectrophotometry and gas chromatography–mass spectrometry. This effect was more dramatic in a siderophore-deficient mutant. In contrast, except for Fe, all the metals stimulated siderophore production. Mass spectrometry showed that siderophore and auxin-containing supernatants from a representative Streptomyces species contain three different hydroxamate siderophores, revealing the individual binding responses of these siderophores to Cd 2+ and Ni 2+, and thus, showing their auxin-stimulating effects. We conclude that siderophores promote auxin synthesis in the presence of Al 3+, Cd 2+, Cu 2+ and Ni 2+ by chelating these metals. Chelation makes the metals less able to inhibit the synthesis of auxins, and potentially increases the plant growth-promoting effects of auxins, which in turn enhances the phytoremediation potential of plants.
ISSN:0045-6535
1879-1298
DOI:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2008.09.079