Abstract

A comprehensive view of the diazotrophic bacterial flora of plants requires that attention be paid to the appropriate carbon and oxygen requirements during isolation of the bacteria. Twenty compounds (monosaccharides, disaccharides, polyols, and organic acids) were therefore examined as carbon and energy sources for nitrogenase activity in semisolid stab cultures at pO(2) values of 0.21, 0.02, and </=0.002 with 12 strains of diazotrophic root-associated bacteria. With the facultatively anaerobic bacteria of the genera Klebsiella and Enterobacter, the best substrate was sucrose, followed by fructose and mannitol, whereas among the organic acids, only malic and fumaric acids supported any activity. With the obligately aerobic bacteria of the genera Azospirillum and Pseudomonas, disaccharides were not utilized for nitrogen fixation, but several organic acids were accepted in addition to monosaccharides and polyols; malate and glucose were the best substrates. The patterns of the carbon sources utilized for nitrogen fixation were coherent within the species, with the exception of one Klebsiella pneumoniae and one Enterobacter agglomerans strain, both isolated from the same individual grass plant, which were unable to utilize lactose. Anaerobic conditions (pO(2) value of </=0.002) were required for maximum nitrogenase activity with the facultatively anaerobic bacteria, with the exception of one strain of E. agglomerans, which required atmospheric oxygen (pO(2) value of 0.21). Also, the obligately aerobic diazotrophs required atmospheric oxygen for maximum nitrogenase activity. The maximum specific nitrogenase activities (expressed as micromoles of C(2)H(4) . milligram of bacterial protein . hour) noted during the exponential growth phase of the bacteria were the following: 2.68 with Azospirillum lipoferum on malate, 2.41 with K. pneumoniae and 1.58 with E. agglomerans on sucrose, and 0.95 with Pseudomonas sp. on malate.

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