Elj. Watkin et al., CALCIUM AND ACID STRESS INTERACT TO AFFECT THE GROWTH OF RHIZOBIUM-LEGUMINOSARUM BV TRIFOLII, Soil biology & biochemistry, 29(9-10), 1997, pp. 1427-1432
The effect of acidity on the growth and survival of six strains of Rhi
zobium leguminosarum by. trifolii (WU95, NA3001, WSM409, TA1, NA3025 a
nd NA3039) was studied. Acid conditions reduced the growth rate of all
strains; mean generation times were 50-60% slower at pH 5.0 than at p
H 7.0. The critical pH for growth on solid media was in the range of 4
.3-4.6. This is consistent with growth of the strains at different pHs
in liquid culture, with NA3001 being the only strain to exhibit a nor
mal growth pattern at pH 4.5. The interaction of acidity and calcium o
n the growth and survival of three of the strains (WU95, WSM409 and TA
I) was studied in the presence of high (300 mu M) and low (20 mu M) co
ncentrations of phosphate. A region of ''acid-stress'' somewhere below
pH 5.0 was observed where growth rate slowed rapidly over 0.2-0.3 of
a pH unit. The presence of 300 mu M phosphate did not affect the criti
cal pH for growth or growth rate within the ''acid-stress'' zone, but
did reduce the mean generation time of all strains studied at pH above
the ''acid-stress'' zone. At pH 7.0, increasing calcium from 300 mu M
to 3000 mu M had little effect on growth rate, but high calcium incre
ased growth rate within the ''acid-stress'' zone and enabled growth at
a lower pH than that observed with the low calcium concentrations. A
four-zone model for the response of root nodule bacteria to acidity is
proposed. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd.