Halotolerant rhizobacteria isolated from a mangrove forest alleviate saline stress in Musa acuminata cv. Berangan

Saline soils resulting from anthropogenic activity and climate change present a challenge to future food security. Towards addressing this, we isolated and characterized halotolerant bacteria from a Malaysian mangrove forest, and explored their effect on morpho-physiological and biochemical paramete...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kaleh, Abdussabur M., Singh, Pooja, Mazumdar, Purabi, Chua, Kah Ooi, Harikrishna, Jennifer A.
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier Gmbh 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/41107/
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Institution: Universiti Malaya
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Summary:Saline soils resulting from anthropogenic activity and climate change present a challenge to future food security. Towards addressing this, we isolated and characterized halotolerant bacteria from a Malaysian mangrove forest, and explored their effect on morpho-physiological and biochemical parameters of banana plantlets under salt stress. A total of 88 rhizobacterial and 16 endophytic bacterial isolates collected from the roots and rhizosphere of Rhizophora apiculata, Avicennia alba and Sonneratia alba, were found to tolerate up to 400 mM of sea salt. Based on best performance in multiple plant growth traits, three rhizobacterial strains RB1, RB3 and RB4 and three endophytic bacterial strains EB1, EB2 and EB3 were used for further analysis. The rhizobacterial strains were identified as Bacillus sp. and endophytic bacteria as Pseudomonas sp. based on 16 S rRNA gene sequence. SEM observation confirmed colonization of each strain on banana plantlet roots. When colonized plantlets were subjected to 90 mM salt and compared to uninoculated (control) and mock inoculated plants, improved plant growth was observed with each of the strains, especially with bacterial strains EB3 and RB3. Biochemical analysis of plantlets revealed that root colonization with EB3 and RB3 enhanced levels of plant chlorophyll (> 5-fold), carotenoid (> 2.85-fold) and proline (2.6-fold and 2.3-fold), while plantlets also showed reduced MDA content (0.45-fold and 0.51-fold), significantly reduced generation of ROS (0.23-fold and 0.47-fold) and lower levels of electrolyte leakage (0.77 and 0.51-fold). Antioxidant enzymes also showed enhanced activity with EB3 and RB3. Our results indicate that these halotolerant Bacillus and Pseudomonas strains from the mangrove have multifunctional plant growth promoting activity and can reduce salt stress in bananas. This data provides a reference for exploring halotolerant microbes from hypersaline environments to overcome salt stress in plants.