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Nicosulfuron application in agricultural soils drives the selection towards NS-tolerant microorganisms harboring various levels of sensitivity to nicosulfuron

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Autor
Petric I., Karpouzas D.G., Bru D., Udikovic-Kolic N., Kandeler E., Djuric S., Martin-Laurent F.
Fecha
2016
Language
en
DOI
10.1007/s11356-015-5645-6
Materia
abundance
agricultural soil
amino acid
bacterium
biodiversity
ecosystem function
ecotoxicology
enzyme activity
herbicide
inhibition
microbial community
pollution tolerance
soil microorganism
toxicity
Actinobacteria
Arthrobacter
Bacillus (bacterium)
Bacteria (microorganisms)
Firmicutes
acetolactate synthase
herbicide
nicosulfuron
pyridine derivative
soil
soil pollutant
sulfonylurea derivative
Actinobacteria
agriculture
analysis
antibiotic resistance
chemistry
drug effects
enzymology
Firmicutes
genetics
growth, development and aging
metabolism
microbiology
soil
soil pollutant
toxicity
Acetolactate Synthase
Actinobacteria
Agriculture
Drug Resistance, Bacterial
Firmicutes
Herbicides
Pyridines
Soil
Soil Microbiology
Soil Pollutants
Sulfonylurea Compounds
Springer Verlag
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Resumen
The action mode of sulfonylurea herbicides is the inhibition of the acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS) required for the biosynthesis of amino acids valine and isoleucine in plants. However, this enzyme is also present in a range of non-targeted organisms, among which soil microorganisms are known for their pivotal role in ecosystem functioning. In order to assess microbial toxicity of sulfonylurea herbicide nicosulfuron (NS), a tiered microcosm (Tier I) to field (Tier II) experiment was designed. Soil bacteria harboring AHAS enzyme tolerant to the herbicide nicosulfuron were enumerated, isolated, taxonomically identified, and physiologically characterized. Results suggested that application of nicosulfuron drives the selection towards NS-tolerant bacteria, with increasing levels of exposure inducing an increase in their abundance and diversity in soil. Tolerance to nicosulfuron was shown to be widespread among the microbial community with various bacteria belonging to Firmicutes (Bacillus) and Actinobacteria (Arthrobacter) phyla representing most abundant and diverse clusters. While Arthrobacter bacterial population dominated community evolved under lower (Tier II) nicosulfuron selection pressure, it turns out that Bacillus dominated community evolved under higher (Tier I) nicosulfuron selection pressure. Different NS-tolerant bacteria likewise showed different levels of sensitivity to the nicosulfuron estimated by growth kinetics on nicosulfuron. As evident, Tier I exposure allowed selection of populations able to better cope with nicosulfuron. One could propose that sulfonylureas-tolerant bacterial community could constitute a useful bioindicator of exposure to these herbicides for assessing their ecotoxicity towards soil microorganisms. © 2015, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/78123
Colecciones
  • Δημοσιεύσεις σε περιοδικά, συνέδρια, κεφάλαια βιβλίων κλπ. [19735]
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