Deep-Sea Actinobacteria Mitigate Salinity Stress in Tomato Seedlings and Their Biosafety Testing
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Rangseekaew, Pharada; Barros Rodríguez, Adoración; Pathom-aree, Wasu; Manzanera Ruiz, Maximino EnriqueEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Biosafety Dermacoccus Marine actinobacteria Plant growth promotion Salt stress Sustainable agriculture
Fecha
2021-08-17Referencia bibliográfica
Rangseekaew, P... [et al.]. Deep-Sea Actinobacteria Mitigate Salinity Stress in Tomato Seedlings and Their Biosafety Testing. Plants 2021, 10, 1687. [https://doi.org/10.3390/plants10081687]
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry for Economy and Competitiveness; European Commission CGL2017-91737-EXP P18-RT-976; Andalusian Regional Government; Chiang Mai University; Graduate School, Chiang Mai University; European CommissionResumen
Soil salinity is an enormous problem affecting global agricultural productivity. Deep-sea
actinobacteria are interesting due to their salt tolerance mechanisms. In the present study, we aim
to determine the ability of deep-sea Dermacoccus (D. barathri MT2.1T and D. profundi MT2.2T) to
promote tomato seedlings under 150 mM NaCl compared with the terrestrial strain D. nishinomiyaensis
DSM20448T. All strains exhibit in vitro plant growth-promoting traits of indole-3-acetic acid
production, phosphate solubilization, and siderophore production. Tomato seedlings inoculated
with D. barathri MT2.1T showed higher growth parameters (shoot and root length, dry weight, and
chlorophyll content) than non-inoculated tomato and the terrestrial strain under 150 mM NaCl. In
addition, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in leaves of tomatoes inoculated with deep-sea Dermacoccus was
lower than the control seedlings. This observation suggested that deep-sea Dermacoccus mitigated
salt stress by reducing oxidative stress caused by hydrogen peroxide. D. barathri MT2.1T showed no
harmful effects on Caenorhabditis elegans, Daphnia magna, Eisenia foetida, and Escherichia coli MC4100 in
biosafety tests. This evidence suggests that D. barathri MT2.1T would be safe for use in the environment.
Our results highlight the potential of deep-sea Dermacoccus as a plant growth promoter for
tomatoes under salinity stress.