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Andreote, FD; Rossetto, PB; Mendes, R; Avila, LA; Labate, CA; Pizzirani-Kleiner, AA; Azevedo, JL; Araujo, WL. 2009. Bacterial community in the rhizosphere and rhizoplane of wild type and transgenic eucalyptus. WORLD JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY & BIOTECHNOLOGY. 25(6):1065-1073.
The rhizosphere is a niche exploited by a wide variety of bacteria. The
expression of heterologous genes by plants might become a factor
affecting the structure of bacterial communities in the rhizosphere. In
a greenhouse experiment, the bacterial community associated to
transgenic eucalyptus, carrying the Lhcb1-2 genes from pea (responsible
for a higher photosynthetic capacity), was evaluated. The culturable
bacterial community associated to transgenic and wild type plants were
not different in density, and the Amplified Ribosomal DNA Restriction
Analysis (ARDRA) typing of 124 strains revealed dominant ribotypes
representing the bacterial orders Burkholderiales, Rhizobiales, and
Actinomycetales, the families Xanthomonadaceae, and Bacillaceae, and
the genus Mycobacterium. Principal Component Analysis based on the
fingerprints obtained by culture-independent Denaturing Gradient Gel
Electrophoresis analysis revealed that Alphaproteobacteria,
Betaproteobacteria and Actinobacteria communities responded differently
to plant genotypes. Similar effects for the cultivation of transgenic
eucalyptus to those observed when two genotype-distinct wild type
plants are compared.
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