PLANT GROWTH PROMOTION By BACTERIA OF THE GENUS AzoSpirillum AND THEIR APPLICATION IN AGRICULTURE
Main Article Content
Abstract
Azospirillum represents the best characterized genus of plant
growth-promoting rhizobacteria. Four aspects of the Azospirillum
plant root interaction are highlighted: associations, plant root in-
teraction, nitrogen fixation and biosynthesis of plant growth hor-
mones. Each of these aspects is dealt with in a comparative way.
Azospirilla are predominantly surface colonizing bacteria. The at-
tachment of Azospirillum cells to plant roots occurs in two steps.
The polar flagellum, of which the flagellin was shown to be a gly-
coprotein, mediates the adsorption step. Nitrogen fixation structural
genes (nif) are highly conserved among all nitrogen-fixing bacteria.
The transcriptional activator NifA is required for expression of oth-
er nif genes in response to two major environmental signals. Many
genes are involved in colonization of plant roots, plant-growth
promotion, and properties related to rhizosphere adaptation. Those
bacteria have been in the centre of scientific interest for the last
two decades because under appropriate conditions members of this
genus can enhance plant development and promote the yield of
several agriculturally important crop plants.
Article Details
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
The author grants the editorial staff of the Polish Journal of Agronomy (abbreviated as PJA) a non-exclusive and royalty-free license to use the author's copyright in the paper/printed and electronic versions of his/her work published in PJA in Poland and abroad, in whole or in any part, including placing the work in electronic databases/databases locally or available on the Internet, for an unlimited period of time in the fields of exploitation specified in article 50 of the Copyright and Related Rights Act.
Manuscripts published in Polish Journal of Agronomy are available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC-BY-SA) license.