Microorganisms that release plant-available phosphate from natural soil phosphate stores may serve as biological alternatives to costly and environmentally damaging phosphate fertilizers. To explore this possibility, we engineered a collection of root bacteria to release plant-available orthophosphate from phytate, an abundant phosphate source in many soils. We identified 82 phylogenetically diverse phytase genes, refactored their sequences for optimal expression in Proteobacteria, and then synthesized and engineered them into the genomes of three rootcolonizing bacteria. Liquid culture assays revealed 41 engineered strains with high levels of phytate hydrolysis. Among these, we identified 12 strains across three bacterial hosts that confer a growth advantage on the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana when phytate is the sole phosphate source. These data demonstrate that DNA synthesis approaches can be used to generate plant-associated strains with novel phosphate-solubilizing capabilities.
CITATION STYLE
Shulse, C. N., Chovatia, M., Agosto, C., Yoshikuni, G. Y., Hamilton, M., Deutsch, S., … Blow, M. J. (2019). Engineered root bacteria release plant-available phosphate from phytate. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 85(18). https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01210-19
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.