Endophytes Crop Productivity and Protection Volume 2 (Sustainable Development and Biodiversity)

(Tina Meador) #1

dominant endophytic species areBacillusspecies (Gupta et al. 2002 ; Bacon and


Hinton 2007 ).


Most culturable endophytic species belongs to the phylum Proteobacteria, class


Firmicutes, Gram-negative and also Bacteroides are less common (Reinhold-Hurek


and Hurek 2011 ). This suggests that 50% of endophytic bacterial communities


could be identified and others are over represented based on their capability to grow


on synthetic medium. To obtain clear picture of the diversity of endophytic


microorganisms, recently a number of studies have been concentrated on identifi-


cation of unculturable endophytes using novel metagenomic analysis approaches


(Akinsanya et al. 2015 ). To this, direct amplification of microbial DNA from plant


tissue samples and application of modern bioinformatics tools allow analysis of a


bacterial community composition and its phylogenetic structure inside plant organs


or tissues (Chun et al. 2007 ; Manter et al. 2010 ; Sessitsch et al. 2012 ) examined the


structure and functions of genes of bacterial endophytes colonizing rice roots


in vivo. The results showed the population was superior by members of


c-proteobacteria, comprising mostly of enterobacter-related endophytes. Whereas


(Tsurumaru et al. 2015 ) studied that endophytic colonization on tap root of sugar


beet (Beta vulgariL.) is a metagenome, who observed that alphaproteobacteria are


dominant, followed by the actinobacteria and the betaproteobacteria. Maropola


et al. ( 2015 ) analysed metagenomic study of the sorghum root and stem micro-
biome and revealed that both were dominated by bacterial pathogens such as


Agrobacterium, Erwinia, Herbaspirillum, Microbacterium, Pseudomonas,


SphingobacteriumandStenotrophomonasspecies.


7.3 Plant Colonization with Endophytes


The apical root zone having thin-walled surface of root cells includes cell elon-


gation and the root hair zone (zone of active penetration), and the basal root zone


with small cracks are the preferable sites of bacterial attachment and subsequent


entry caused by the emergence of lateral roots (zone of passive penetration)


(Fig.7.1). For active invasion, endophytic bacteria must bear the abilities of pro-


duction of cellulolytic enzymes to hydrolyze exodermal cell walls of plants.


As earlier, the density of bacteria in the rhizosphere and rhizoplane is always


higher than in the soil which lacks substances secreted from the roots of plants


(Rosenblueth and Martinez-Romero 2006 ) for example, with seed germination,


amount of carbon and nitrogen compounds are excreted into the surrounding


environment that invites a large population of microorganisms (Okon and


Labandera-Gonzales 1994 ). The root exudates contain that colonize different bac-


terial genera and they differ normally according to plant species (Bisseling et al.


2009 ).


Root colonization or rhizospheric beneficial microorganisms are familiar bio-


control agents and plant growth promoters. They have indirect positive effects on
plants with their mechanistic behaviour that mainly includes antagonism against


136 A. Muthukumar et al.


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