Abstract

BackgroundBarely Hordeum vulgare L. is considered one of the most important cereal crops with economic and industrial importance in the world, but its productivity is affected by climate change and abiotic stresses. One of the most recent and important microbiological promising aspects is the use of associated microorganisms, especially the endophytic bacteria producers for non-ribosomal peptides which play an important role in promoting plant growth, productivity, and tolerance to biotic and abiotic stresses. This work aims to identify vertically transferred or inherited endophytic bacterial communities in barely seeds, detect the presence of non-ribosomal peptides from these isolated endophytic strains and study their effect on protein patterns as a response to salinity stress.ResultsFrom two different tolerant (Giza 126) and sensitive (Giza 123) barely seeds cultivars, six different endophytic bacterial strains were isolated and identified using 16S rRNA. Bacterial strains belonged to Bacillus, Paenibacillus, Staphylococcus and Acinetobacter genera. Three of them have been isolated from both sensitive and tolerant barely cultivar (Uncultured Staphylococcus, Acinetobacter and Priestia endophytica or Bacillus endophyticus), while the other three endophytes have been isolated uniquely from the tolerant barely cultivar (Paenibacillus glucanolyticus, Bacillus cereus and Bacillus sp.). Non-ribosomal peptide synthetases genes NRPs of two lipopeptide families; surfactins and kurstakins have been detected using both bioinformatic analysis and degenerate primers. On the other hand, fragments similar to NRPs genes might be considered new NRPS molecules in Paenibacillus glucanolyticus, Acinetobacter and Priestia endophytica which have been detected using degenerate primers and required whole genome sequencing. The effect of soaking barely seeds exposed to 2.5% NaCl using SDS-PAGE electrophoresis revealed the presence of 24 bands, 10 of them were monomorphic with 41.5%, and 14 were polymorphic with 58.5% polymorphism.ConclusionThe overnight soaking and co-cultivation of isolated endophytic strains with barely seeds before planting proved their capability in conferring salt stress tolerance to barely seedlings which appeared in protein patterns. We could consider these barely seeds endophytic among the PGPR strains promising to improve plant growth during abiotic stresses.

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