Improvement of rhizobium‐soybean symbiosis and nitrogen fixation under drought

Abstract The symbiotic interaction between soybean plants and rhizobacteria can be severely affected by drought, which results in a reduction in symbiotic nitrogen fixation and ultimately decreased yields. The aim of our research was to determine whether symbiotically efficient rhizobia that can bet...

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Main Authors: Tsholofelo Kibido, Karl Kunert, Matome Makgopa, Michelle Greve, Juan Vorster
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-02-01
Series:Food and Energy Security
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/fes3.177
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spelling doaj-9ae690e16f894701bd2b87608f0b6cb62021-04-02T14:05:28ZengWileyFood and Energy Security2048-36942020-02-0191n/an/a10.1002/fes3.177Improvement of rhizobium‐soybean symbiosis and nitrogen fixation under droughtTsholofelo Kibido0Karl Kunert1Matome Makgopa2Michelle Greve3Juan Vorster4Department of Plant and Soil Sciences University of Pretoria Pretoria South AfricaDepartment of Plant and Soil Sciences University of Pretoria Pretoria South AfricaDepartment of Plant and Soil Sciences University of Pretoria Pretoria South AfricaDepartment of Plant and Soil Sciences University of Pretoria Pretoria South AfricaDepartment of Plant and Soil Sciences University of Pretoria Pretoria South AfricaAbstract The symbiotic interaction between soybean plants and rhizobacteria can be severely affected by drought, which results in a reduction in symbiotic nitrogen fixation and ultimately decreased yields. The aim of our research was to determine whether symbiotically efficient rhizobia that can better tolerate soil water deficits can improve nodule performance in plants subjected to drought. Firstly, rhizobial strains were selected that exhibited differences in tolerance to salt (NaCl) or water deficit (PEG 6000). Sinorhizobium fredii strain SMH12 showed the highest tolerance to these treatments while Bradyrhizobium diazoefficiens strain WB74‐1 showed the lowest tolerance. Greenhouse‐grown Prima 2000 soybean plants were then inoculated with either SMH12 or WB74‐1 and subjected to two water deficit regimes. Different nodule and plant growth traits were determined, including nodule number, dry weight, water potential, and the accumulation of malondialdehyde and ureide. Plants inoculated with SMH12 had significantly more nodules under water deficit conditions than those inoculated WB74‐1, despite having lower root and shoot biomass. SMH12‐inoculated plants had higher nodule water potentials and lower malondialdehyde contents than the WB74‐1‐inoculated plants. These results demonstrate that inoculation of soybean plants with the more water deficit‐tolerant S. fredii strain improved nodule characteristics when plants were grown under water deficit conditions. However, these improved nodule characteristics do not always directly translate into better plant growth.https://doi.org/10.1002/fes3.177droughtnitrogen fixationosmotolerancerhizobiumsoybean
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tsholofelo Kibido
Karl Kunert
Matome Makgopa
Michelle Greve
Juan Vorster
spellingShingle Tsholofelo Kibido
Karl Kunert
Matome Makgopa
Michelle Greve
Juan Vorster
Improvement of rhizobium‐soybean symbiosis and nitrogen fixation under drought
Food and Energy Security
drought
nitrogen fixation
osmotolerance
rhizobium
soybean
author_facet Tsholofelo Kibido
Karl Kunert
Matome Makgopa
Michelle Greve
Juan Vorster
author_sort Tsholofelo Kibido
title Improvement of rhizobium‐soybean symbiosis and nitrogen fixation under drought
title_short Improvement of rhizobium‐soybean symbiosis and nitrogen fixation under drought
title_full Improvement of rhizobium‐soybean symbiosis and nitrogen fixation under drought
title_fullStr Improvement of rhizobium‐soybean symbiosis and nitrogen fixation under drought
title_full_unstemmed Improvement of rhizobium‐soybean symbiosis and nitrogen fixation under drought
title_sort improvement of rhizobium‐soybean symbiosis and nitrogen fixation under drought
publisher Wiley
series Food and Energy Security
issn 2048-3694
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Abstract The symbiotic interaction between soybean plants and rhizobacteria can be severely affected by drought, which results in a reduction in symbiotic nitrogen fixation and ultimately decreased yields. The aim of our research was to determine whether symbiotically efficient rhizobia that can better tolerate soil water deficits can improve nodule performance in plants subjected to drought. Firstly, rhizobial strains were selected that exhibited differences in tolerance to salt (NaCl) or water deficit (PEG 6000). Sinorhizobium fredii strain SMH12 showed the highest tolerance to these treatments while Bradyrhizobium diazoefficiens strain WB74‐1 showed the lowest tolerance. Greenhouse‐grown Prima 2000 soybean plants were then inoculated with either SMH12 or WB74‐1 and subjected to two water deficit regimes. Different nodule and plant growth traits were determined, including nodule number, dry weight, water potential, and the accumulation of malondialdehyde and ureide. Plants inoculated with SMH12 had significantly more nodules under water deficit conditions than those inoculated WB74‐1, despite having lower root and shoot biomass. SMH12‐inoculated plants had higher nodule water potentials and lower malondialdehyde contents than the WB74‐1‐inoculated plants. These results demonstrate that inoculation of soybean plants with the more water deficit‐tolerant S. fredii strain improved nodule characteristics when plants were grown under water deficit conditions. However, these improved nodule characteristics do not always directly translate into better plant growth.
topic drought
nitrogen fixation
osmotolerance
rhizobium
soybean
url https://doi.org/10.1002/fes3.177
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