posted on 2015-04-07, 00:00authored byCelia Jimenez-Sanchez, Lukas Y. Wick, Manuel Cantos, José-Julio Ortega-Calvo
Bacterial
dispersal is a key driver of the ecology of microbial
contaminant degradation in soils. This work investigated the role
of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in the motility, attachment, and
transport of the soil bacterium Pseudomonas putida G7 in saturated porous media. The study is based on the hypothesis
that DOM quality is critical to triggering tactic motility and, consequently,
affects bacterial transport and dispersal. Sunflower root exudates,
humic acids (HA), and the synthetic oleophilic fertilizer S-200 were
used as representatives of fresh, weathered, and artificially processed
DOM with high nitrogen and phosphorus contents, respectively. We studied
DOM levels of 16–130 mg L–1, which are representative
of DOM concentrations typically found in agricultural soil pore water.
In contrast to its responses to HA and S-200, strain G7 exhibited
a tactic behavior toward root exudates, as quantified by chemotaxis
assays and single-cell motility observations. All DOM types promoted
bacterial transport through sand at high concentrations (∼130
mg L–1). At low DOM concentrations (∼16 mg
L–1), the enhancement occurred only in the presence
of sunflower root exudates, and this enhancement did not occur with
G7 bacteria devoid of flagella. Our results suggest that tactic DOM
effectors strongly influence bacterial transport and the interception
probability of motile bacteria by collector surfaces.