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Rhizospheria bacteria of Poplus euphratica improve resistance of wood plants to heavy metals.

CHEN Wen1, OUYANG Li-ming1, KONG Pei-jun1, YANG Ze-yu1, WU Wei1, ZHU Dong-lin1, ZHANG Li-li2   

  1. (1School of Biotechnology, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai 200237, China;  2School of Bioscience, Tarim University, Alar 843300, Xingjiang, China)
  • Online:2015-09-18 Published:2015-09-18

Abstract:

Populus euphratica is a special kind of woody plant, which lives in desert area of northwestern China and is strongly resistant to multiple abiotic stresses. However, the knowledge about the ecology and physiological roles of microbes associated with P. euphratica is still not enough. In this paper, we isolated 72 strains resistant to heavy metals from rhizospheric soil of wild P. euphratica forest in Shaya County of Xinjiang. There were 50 strains conveying resistance to one of four heavy metals (Cu2+, Ni2+, Pb2+or Zn2+), and 9 strains were resistant to at least three kinds of these heavy metals. Five of the multiheavy metal resistant bacteria were inoculated to bamboo willow and the growth inhibition of plant under stresses of Cu2+ or Zn2+ was found to be alleviated to different extent. Among the 5 strains, Pseudomonas sp. Z30 and Cupriavidus sp. N8 significantly improved the growth of plant under stresses of both zinc and copper when compared to the uninoculated controls. The results showed the diversity of heavy metal resistant bacteria associated with P. euphratica which lived in a nonheavy metal polluted area and some of the multiheavy metal resistant bacteria may greatly improve the growth of host plant under heavy metal stress. The PGPB associated with P. euphratica has potential application in the xylophytemicrobe remediation of environmental heavy metal pollution.