Divulging diazotrophic bacterial community structure in Kuwait desert ecosystems and their N2-fixation potential.

Kuwait is a semi-arid region with soils that are relatively nitrogen-poor. Thus, biological nitrogen fixation is an important natural process in which N2-fixing bacteria (diazotrophs) convert atmospheric nitrogen into plant-usable forms such as ammonium and nitrate. Currently, there is limited infor...

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Main Authors: M K Suleiman, A M Quoreshi, N R Bhat, A J Manuvel, M T Sivadasan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220679
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author M K Suleiman
A M Quoreshi
N R Bhat
A J Manuvel
M T Sivadasan
author_facet M K Suleiman
A M Quoreshi
N R Bhat
A J Manuvel
M T Sivadasan
author_sort M K Suleiman
collection DOAJ
description Kuwait is a semi-arid region with soils that are relatively nitrogen-poor. Thus, biological nitrogen fixation is an important natural process in which N2-fixing bacteria (diazotrophs) convert atmospheric nitrogen into plant-usable forms such as ammonium and nitrate. Currently, there is limited information on free-living and root-associated nitrogen-fixing bacteria and their potential to fix nitrogen and aid natural plant communities in the Kuwait desert. In this study, free living N2-fixing diazotrophs were enriched and isolated from the rhizosphere soil associated with three native keystone plant species; Rhanterium epapposum, Farsetia aegyptia, and Haloxylon salicornicum. Root-associated bacteria were isolated from the root nodules of Vachellia pachyceras. The result showed that the strains were clustered in five groups represented by class: γ-proteobacteria, and α-proteobacteria; phyla: Actinobacteria being the most dominant, followed by phyla: Firmicutes, and class: β-proteobacteria. This study initially identified 50 nitrogen-fixers by16S rRNA gene sequencing, of which 78% were confirmed to be nitrogen-fixers using the acetylene reduction assay. Among the nitrogen fixers identified, the genus Rhizobium was predominant in the rhizosphere soil of R. epapposum and H. salicornicum, whereas Pseudomonas was predominant in the rhizosphere soil of F. aegyptia, The species Agrobacterium tumefaciens was mainly found to be dominant among the root nodules of V. pachyceras and followed by Cellulomonas, Bacillus, and Pseudomonas genera as root-associated bacteria. The variety of diazotrophs revealed in this study, signifying the enormous importance of free-living and root-associated bacteria in extreme conditions and suggesting potential ecological importance of diazotrophs in arid ecosystem. To our knowledge, this study is the first to use culture-based isolation, molecular identification, and evaluation of N2-fixing ability to detail diazotroph diversity in Kuwaiti desert soils.
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spelling doaj.art-9f7c3d3cdaf54b308c8bba6f736b12b22022-12-21T22:38:32ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-011412e022067910.1371/journal.pone.0220679Divulging diazotrophic bacterial community structure in Kuwait desert ecosystems and their N2-fixation potential.M K SuleimanA M QuoreshiN R BhatA J ManuvelM T SivadasanKuwait is a semi-arid region with soils that are relatively nitrogen-poor. Thus, biological nitrogen fixation is an important natural process in which N2-fixing bacteria (diazotrophs) convert atmospheric nitrogen into plant-usable forms such as ammonium and nitrate. Currently, there is limited information on free-living and root-associated nitrogen-fixing bacteria and their potential to fix nitrogen and aid natural plant communities in the Kuwait desert. In this study, free living N2-fixing diazotrophs were enriched and isolated from the rhizosphere soil associated with three native keystone plant species; Rhanterium epapposum, Farsetia aegyptia, and Haloxylon salicornicum. Root-associated bacteria were isolated from the root nodules of Vachellia pachyceras. The result showed that the strains were clustered in five groups represented by class: γ-proteobacteria, and α-proteobacteria; phyla: Actinobacteria being the most dominant, followed by phyla: Firmicutes, and class: β-proteobacteria. This study initially identified 50 nitrogen-fixers by16S rRNA gene sequencing, of which 78% were confirmed to be nitrogen-fixers using the acetylene reduction assay. Among the nitrogen fixers identified, the genus Rhizobium was predominant in the rhizosphere soil of R. epapposum and H. salicornicum, whereas Pseudomonas was predominant in the rhizosphere soil of F. aegyptia, The species Agrobacterium tumefaciens was mainly found to be dominant among the root nodules of V. pachyceras and followed by Cellulomonas, Bacillus, and Pseudomonas genera as root-associated bacteria. The variety of diazotrophs revealed in this study, signifying the enormous importance of free-living and root-associated bacteria in extreme conditions and suggesting potential ecological importance of diazotrophs in arid ecosystem. To our knowledge, this study is the first to use culture-based isolation, molecular identification, and evaluation of N2-fixing ability to detail diazotroph diversity in Kuwaiti desert soils.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220679
spellingShingle M K Suleiman
A M Quoreshi
N R Bhat
A J Manuvel
M T Sivadasan
Divulging diazotrophic bacterial community structure in Kuwait desert ecosystems and their N2-fixation potential.
PLoS ONE
title Divulging diazotrophic bacterial community structure in Kuwait desert ecosystems and their N2-fixation potential.
title_full Divulging diazotrophic bacterial community structure in Kuwait desert ecosystems and their N2-fixation potential.
title_fullStr Divulging diazotrophic bacterial community structure in Kuwait desert ecosystems and their N2-fixation potential.
title_full_unstemmed Divulging diazotrophic bacterial community structure in Kuwait desert ecosystems and their N2-fixation potential.
title_short Divulging diazotrophic bacterial community structure in Kuwait desert ecosystems and their N2-fixation potential.
title_sort divulging diazotrophic bacterial community structure in kuwait desert ecosystems and their n2 fixation potential
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220679
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AT nrbhat divulgingdiazotrophicbacterialcommunitystructureinkuwaitdesertecosystemsandtheirn2fixationpotential
AT ajmanuvel divulgingdiazotrophicbacterialcommunitystructureinkuwaitdesertecosystemsandtheirn2fixationpotential
AT mtsivadasan divulgingdiazotrophicbacterialcommunitystructureinkuwaitdesertecosystemsandtheirn2fixationpotential