Na-phytate Decomposition by Aerobic Soil Microorganisms: Phosphate Release and Spectrometric Indexing of Phytase Efficiency

Read the full article

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Phytates represent the most abundant organic phosphorus compounds, occurring primarily as constituents of plant residues in soil. The availability of phytate-related phosphorus to plant nutrition is constrained by the scarce pathways of phytate hydrolysis and can be improved by bio-technological approaches involving microbial bioactivation of soil-bound phosphates. With this purpose, we developed a three-stages experimental methodological framework comprising: 1) selection of beneficial microorganisms, 2) monitoring of phytate decomposition, and 3) indexing of phytase efficiency. Within this framework, we 1) revealed the capability of soil bacteria Bacillus megaterium IMV B-7287, B. megaterium DSM 32, and Kocuria rosea B-42 to metabolize sodium phytate as a sole source of carbon and phosphorus under nutrient limitation highlighting their value for the development of sustainable phosphorus management strategies; 2) combined application of vanado-molybdate photocolorimetry, UV-absorption spectroscopy and fluorescence spectrometry to facilitate the tracing of microbial phytate transformation in solution with a model Na-phytate substrate and the quantitation of phytase efficiency in soil upon rhizobox cultivation; 3) suggested a fluorometric phytate-decomposition ratio as an index expressing the efficiency of phytase activity for quantitation of phytate-originating phosphate released into soil. The applicability of this approach was tested on the rhizosphere of maize. The acquired phytate-decomposition maps show phytase efficiency to be higher in maize-root system developing from bacterized seed. Non-bacterized maize delivers relatively weaker phytate decomposition sites confined within a close root vicinity.

Article activity feed