نتایج جستجو برای: a brasilense

تعداد نتایج: 13432258  

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1990
C Fritzsche E G Niemann

N balance and N dilution were determined from growth of Azospirillum brasilense Sp7 and two unidentified gram-negative nitrogen-fixing microorganisms in continuous culture supplied with NH(4)Cl. At the 1.1 and 2.2 mM NH(4)Cl steady states (N-to-C ratios of 1:68 and 1:34, respectively), the organisms grew with NH(4)Cl and N(2) as N sources simultaneously under carbon limitation. No ammonium coul...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 2004
Suzanne E Greer-Phillips Bonnie B Stephens Gladys Alexandre

Motility responses triggered by changes in the electron transport system are collectively known as energy taxis. In Azospirillum brasilense, energy taxis was shown to be the principal form of locomotor control. In the present study, we have identified a novel chemoreceptor-like protein, named Tlp1, which serves as an energy taxis transducer. The Tlp1 protein is predicted to have an N-terminal p...

Journal: :FEMS microbiology letters 2009
Anat Lerner Susana Castro-Sowinski Hadas Lerner Yaacov Okon Saul Burdman

Here we report the identification of a glycogen phosphorylase (glgP) gene in the plant growth-promoting rhizobacterium Azospirillum brasilense, Sp7, and the characterization of a glgP marker exchange mutant of this strain. The glgP mutant showed a twofold reduction of glycogen phosphorylase activity and an increased glycogen accumulation as compared with wild-type Sp7, indicating that the ident...

Journal: :Journal of bacteriology 1996
I B Zhulin V A Bespalov M S Johnson B L Taylor

The microaerophilic nitrogen-fixing bacterium Azospirillum brasilense formed a sharply defined band in a spatial gradient of oxygen. As a result of aerotaxis, the bacteria were attracted to a specific low concentration of oxygen (3 to 5 microM). Bacteria swimming away from the aerotactic band were repelled by the higher or lower concentration of oxygen that they encountered and returned to the ...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 2002
Daniel Kadouri Saul Burdman Edouard Jurkevitch Yaacov Okon

Like many other prokaryotes, rhizobacteria of the genus Azospirillum produce high levels of poly(beta-hydroxybutyrate) (PHB) under suboptimal growth conditions. Utilization of PHB by bacteria under stress has been proposed as a mechanism that favors their compatible establishment in competitive environments, thus showing great potential for the improvement of bacterial inoculants for plants and...

Journal: :Archives of microbiology 2003
Daniel Kadouri Edouard Jurkevitch Yaacov Okon

Like many other prokaryotes, rhizobacteria of the genus Azospirillum produce high levels of poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate (PHB) under sub-optimal growth conditions. Utilization of PHB by bacteria under stress has been proposed as a mechanism that favors their compatible establishment in competitive environments. PHB depolymerase (PhaZ) is an essential enzyme in PHB degradation. The phaZ gene was id...

Journal: :Systematic and applied microbiology 2001
M Stoffels T Castellanos A Hartmann

The genera Azospirillum, Skermanella and Rhodocista form a phylogenetic subgroup within the alfa subclass of Proteobacteria. Based on comparative 16S rRNA sequence analysis a nested set of new oligonucleotide probes was designed. It comprises probes for the whole genus cluster Azospirillum-Skermanella-Rhodocista, for the Azospirilli subcluster I including A. lipoferum, A. doebereinerae, A. larg...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 1994
Y Bashan G Holguin

The root-to-root travel of the beneficial bacterium Azospirillum brasilense on wheat and soybean roots in agar, sand, and light-textured soil was monitored. We used a motile wild-type (Mot) strain and a motility-deficient (Mot) strain which was derived from the wild-type strain. The colonization levels of inoculated roots were similar for the two strains. Mot cells moved from inoculated roots (...

Journal: :Canadian journal of microbiology 2001
V K Lebsky L E Gonzalez-Bashan Y Bashan

Chlorella vulgaris, a microalga often used in wastewater treatment, was coimmobilized and coincubated either with the plant growth-promoting bacterium Azospirillum brasilense, or with its natural associative bacterium Phyllobacterium myrsinacearum, in alginate beads designed for advanced wastewater treatment. Interactions between the microalga and each of the bacterial species were followed usi...

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