Current Microbiology, Vol.52, No.6, 473-476, 2006
Production of indole-3-acetic acid in the plant-beneficial strain Pseudomonas chlororaphis O6 is negatively regulated by the global sensor kinase GacS
Certain plant growth-promoting bacteria, such as Pseudomonas fluorescens 89B61 and Bacillus pumilus SE34, secreted high levels of indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) in tryptophan-amended medium in stationary phase as determined by chromogenic analysis and high-performance liquid chromatography. Two other growth-promoting strains, P. chlororaphis O6 and Serratia marcescens 90-166, did not produce these high levels of IAA. However, when the gacS mutant of P. chlororaphis O6 was grown in tryptophan-supplemented medium, IAA was detected in culture filtrates. IAA production by the gacS mutant in P. chlororaphis O6 was repressed in the tryptophan medium by complementation with the wild-type gacS gene. Thus, the global regulatory Gac system in P. chlororaphis O6 acts as a negative regulator of IAA production from trypophan.