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Craigiebuckler, Aberdeen, AB15 8QH, UK “ENDEGRADE” Endophytic bacteria for improving phytoremediation Fiona Porteous Moore, Colin Campbell, Edward Moore & E.U. partners
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ENDEGRADE 7 project partners SCOTLAND BELGIUM IRELAND DENMARK Macaulay IT Carlow Institute LUC VITO DEC-NV DTU NERI (INDUSTRIAL PARTNER)
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PHYTOREMEDIATION Ideally plants must have deep roots perennial large water use Plants breakdown/volatilise compounds store them in leaves/shoots 4 methods phytovolatilisation phytoextraction rhizofiltration phytostabilisation
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Problems with some current remediation strategies Phytoremediation >pollutants kill the plants >volatilisation through leaves >partial degradation leading to toxic products Soil bioremediation >indigenous population overcomes introduced degraders >nutrient applications often needed >pollutants can be taken up by plants faster than soil microbes can degrade them
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Endegrade - the concept enhance plant survival enhance degradation reduce volatilisation
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Project aims Isolate & identify bacteria from Willow and Poplar Screen for natural degradation potential for target compounds Equip endophytic bacteria with degradation plasmids Assess re-colonisation and phytoremediation efficiency Risk assessment for field use
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What is known about endophytic bacteria? neutral or beneficial effects on the plant - direct plant growth-promoting activity - N 2 -fixation - disease suppression - enhanced pest control exist in all plant species examined 10 3 - 10 5 cfu/gm plant tissue highest numbers observed in the roots bacteria remain localised in specific tissues
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We do not know… community dynamics & diversity colonisation potential plant specific relationships?
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Pollutants problematic for phytoremediation...
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Bacterial endophyte isolates analysed to date
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Relative frequencies of bacterial isolates, classified to the genus level, on the basis of 16S rDNA sequence analysis
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Relative frequencies of isolates classified as Pseudomonas species, based upon 16S rDNA sequence analysis
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Distribution of endophytic bacterial isolates in Poplar
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Multivariate analysis - presence / absence of isolates in different species of trees. Effect of tree species
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Napthalene degradation in Pea (proof of concept) Work by: Germaine et al, IT Carlow
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Plant protection Iris & VM1450 - 2,4-D protection (Germaine et al, IT Carlow) Pea & PCB degraders - 4-chlorobiphenyl protection (Germaine et al, IT Carlow) Lupine & VM1330- Toluene protection, reduced volatilisation, enhanced growth (Barac et al, LUC) Toluene & TCE degrader constructs from Brassica napus - to test in plantae degradation (Borremans et al, VITO)
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Re-inoculation K.Germain et al, FEMS Microbiol.Ecol, in press. 3 endophytic isolates gfp/Kan marked and re-inoculated into Poplar (original host) All strains colonised roots, and 2 strains colonised stems and leaves after 10 weeks
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VM1449 (Ps. veronii) colony on root xylem of poplar tree 10 weeks after inoculation x1000
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Poplar used in phytoremediation field trial in Belgium
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Current work Endophytic construct in Poplar exposed to 2,4-D - does in degrade/protect? >2,4-D degradation genes & colonisation Seasonal community dynamics of endophytes - affects inoculation time/method >intra/inter species variation, seasonal dynamics, compartmentalisation
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Acknowledgements Macaulay Institute - Renate Wendler, Duncan White NERI - Denmark - Uli Karlson DTU - Denmark - Stefan Trapp VITO - Belgium - Daniel van der Lelie, Brigitte Borremans LUC- Belgium - Jaco Vangronsveld, Licy Oeyen, Tanja Barac IT Carlow- Ireland - David Dowling, David Ryan, Keiran Germaine, Elaine Keogh DEC NV- Belgium - Siegried D’Haene, Gunther de Becker
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