Galactosides in the rhizosphere: Utilization by Sinorhizobium meliloti and development of a biosensor
- Departments of *Molecular and Cell Biology, and †Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, 75 North Eagleville Road, U-44, Storrs, CT 06269
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Edited by Pamela A. Matson, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, and approved January 26, 2001 (received for review August 9, 2000)
Abstract
Identifying the types and distributions of organic substrates that support microbial activities around plant roots is essential for a full understanding of plant–microbe interactions and rhizosphere ecology. We have constructed a strain of the soil bacterium Sinorhizobium meliloti containing a gfp gene fused to the melA promoter which is induced on exposure to galactose and galactosides. We used the fusion strain as a biosensor to determine that galactosides are released from the seeds of several different legume species during germination and are also released from roots of alfalfa seedlings growing on artificial medium. Galactoside presence in seed wash and sterile root washes was confirmed by HPLC. Experiments examining microbial growth on α-galactosides in seed wash suggested that α-galactoside utilization could play an important role in supporting growth of S. meliloti near germinating seeds of alfalfa. When inoculated into microcosms containing legumes or grasses, the biosensor allowed us to visualize the localized presence of galactosides on and around roots in unsterilized soil, as well as the grazing of fluorescent bacteria by protozoa. Galactosides were present in patches around zones of lateral root initiation and around roots hairs, but not around root tips. Such biosensors can reveal intriguing aspects of the environment and the physiology of the free-living soil S. meliloti before and during the establishment of nodulation, and they provide a nondestructive, spatially explicit method for examining rhizosphere soil chemical composition.
Footnotes
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↵ ‡ To whom reprint request shoud be addressed. E-mail: gage{at}uconnvm.uconn.edu.
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This paper was submitted directly (Track II) to the PNAS office.
- Abbreviations:
- GFP,
- green fluorescent protein;
- BNM,
- basic nodulation medium
- Copyright © 2001, The National Academy of Sciences





