Plant growth
promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) are soil bacteria with
some beneficial effects on soil properties, plant growth and the
environment. Bacteria that colonize plant roots and
promote plant growth are referred to as plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR).
The most intensively researched use of PGPR has
been in agricultural and horticulture. Several PGPR formulations
are currently available as commercial products
for agricultural production. Recently developing areas of PGPR usage
include forest regeneration and phytoremediation of contaminated
soils.
Rhizobacteria are root
colonizing bacteria that form symbiotic relationship with many plants.
They are an important group of microorganisms used in biofertilizer. PGPRs have
different relationship with different species of host plants. The two major
classes of relationship are rhizospheric and endophytic. Rhizospheric
relationship consists of the PGPRs that colonize the surface of the
root often forming root nodules.
PGPR are
considered as efficient microbial competitors in the soil-root
zone. Genera of PGPR generally include, Arthrobacter,
Azospirillum, Bacillus, Bradyrhizobium, Frankia, Pseudomonas, Rhizobium,
Serratia, Thiobacillus, and others.
Siderophores, bacteriocins, and
antibiotics production as antagonistic activities
MECHANISM.
PGPRs enhance plant growth by direct
and indirect mechanisms. The direct promotion of plant growth by PGPR entails
either providing the plant with a compound that is synthesized by the bacterium,
for example phyto-hormones, or facilitating the uptake of certain nutrients from
the environment. The indirect promotion of plant growth occurs when PGPR lessen
or prevent the deleterious effects of one or more phytopathogenic organisms.
This can happen by producing antagonistic substances or by inducing resistance
to pathogens.
BIOCONTROL.
Rhizobacteria are also able to control
plant diseases that are caused by other bacteria andfungi.
Disease is suppressed through induced systematic resistance and through the
production of anti fungal metabolites.
Pseudomonas biocontrol strains
have been genetically modified to improve plant growth and improve the disease
resistance of agricultural crops.
PGPR ACTION UNDER STRESSED CONDITION.
The PGPR containing
ACC deaminase are present in various soils and offer promise as a bacterial inoculum
for improvement of plant growth, particularly under unfavourable environmental
conditions such as flooding, heavy metals, phytopathogens,
drought and high salt. Ethylene is an important phytohormone, but over-produced
ethylene under stressful conditions can result in the inhibition of plant
growth or death, especially for seedlings. PGPR containing
ACC deaminase can hydrolyze ACC, the immediate precursor of ethylene, to
F-ketobutarate and ammonia, and in this way promote plant growth. Inoculation
of crops with ACC deaminase-containing PGPR may
assist plant growth by alleviating deleterious effects of salt stress .
APPLICATIONS
OF PGPRs
They stimulate
plant growth through mobilizing nutrients in soils and producing numerous plant
growth regulators.
PGPR also
modify root functioning, improve plant nutrition and influence the physiology
of the whole plant.
They protect plants from phytopathogens by controlling or inhibiting them.
PGPR is
able to reduce the incidence and severity of disease. Some PGPR inoculated
bacteria on seeds before planting can give the defense on the hood of roots of
plants. This makes PGPR bacteria capable of reducing the severity
of disease.
The most
intensively researched use of PGPR has been in agricultural and
horticulture several PGPR formulations are currently
available as commercial products for agricultural production.
In recent
years, the use of PGPR to promote plant growth has
increased in various parts of the world. PGPR can
affect plant growth by production and release of secondary metabolites (plant
growth regulators/phytohormones/biologically active substances), lessening or
preventing deleterious effects of phytopathogenic
organisms in the rhizosphere and/or facilitating the
availability and uptake of certain nutrients from the root environment. PGPR having
multiple activities directed toward plant growth promotion via exhibiting
bioremediating potentials by detoxifying pollutants like, heavy
metals and pesticides and controlling a range of phytopathogens.
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