Abstract

Exploring the source of quiescent bacteria in tissue-cultured bananas (Musa sp.) we demonstrate here through a combination of bacterial 16S rDNA-based molecular technique, light microscopy and cultivation-based approaches the ubiquitous presence of endophytic bacteria in the field shoots of different genotypes (Grand Naine, Robusta, Dwarf Cavendish, Ney Poovan and exotic accessions) and their widespread prevalence in apparently clean tissue cultures. A portion of field shoot-tips (10–60%) showed cultivable endophytes, especially during rainy season, yielding 102–105 colony forming units g−1 fresh tissue in ‘Grand Naine’, which overtly expressed on tissue culture medium as well. The rest showed no colony development on diverse bacteriological media but proved PCR+ve to bacterial primers indicating the presence of normally non-culturable organisms, which was endorsed by microscopic observations. Such endophytes gradually turned cultivable rendering all visibly clean cultures as quiescent bacteria-harboring after a few (2–4) to several (8–20) passages, resulting in as much as 1.7 × 105 – 4.0 × 107 colony forming units g−1 tissue of ‘Grand Naine’ after ten passages, yielding different organisms. This study has thus exposed the ubiquitous and intense association existing between endophytes and bananas, including their quiescent survival in suspension cultures. The effect due to quiescent bacteria in micropropagated stocks could not be generalized. The observations question the fundamental principle of asepsis in plant tissue cultures and bring in new information on plant-endophtye association in vitro with implications in micropropagation, germplasm conservation, cell culture studies and molecular profiling. The possible involvement of unsuspected endophytic bacteria in tissue-culture associated phenomena like habituation and epigenetic and somaclonal variations are discussed.

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