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Published: Jul 20, 2018 DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.2927 Views: 5237
Abstract
Here we describe a simple method to quantify the number of viable bacteria (e.g., Enterobacter sp. SA187) that colonize the root system of Arabidopsis thaliana.
Keywords: Arabidopsis thalianaBackground
Colonization of roots by inoculated bacteria is an important step in the interaction between beneficial bacteria and the host plant. Enterobacter sp. SA187 is an endophytic bacterium that has been isolated from root nodules of the indigenous desert plant Indigofera argentea (Andrés-Barrao et al., 2017; Lafi et al., 2017). SA187 promotes the growth of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana under diverse abiotic stresses such as salinity, drought or high temperature, demonstrating an important potential for application as Plant Growth Promoting Bacteria (PGPR) to improve abiotic resistance and yield of crops in arid lands. SA187 can colonize both roots and shoots of A. thaliana on ½ MS agar plates or in soil (de Zélicourt et al., 2018). To follow the fate of inoculant strain SA187 on the non-host plant A. thaliana, we applied a routinely cultivation-dependent method. This protocol has been successfully used to mounter the bacterial number colonized both root and shoot of the A. thaliana plant under different abiotic stresses (de Zélicourt et al., 2018).
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Category
Microbiology > Microbe-host interactions > Bacterium
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