Deepamala Maji
Central Institute of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants
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Publication
Featured researches published by Deepamala Maji.
Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2012
Deepti Barnawal; Nidhi Bharti; Deepamala Maji; Chandan S. Chanotiya; Alok Kalra
Ocimum sanctum grown as rain-fed crop, is known to be poorly adapted to waterlogged conditions. Many a times the crop suffers extreme damages because of anoxia and excessive ethylene generation due to waterlogging conditions present under heavy rain. The usefulness of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) deaminase-containing plant growth promoting rhizobacteria was investigated under waterlogging stress. The comparison of herb yield and stress induced biochemical changes of waterlogged and non-waterlogged plants with and without ACC deaminase-containing microbiological treatments were monitored in this study. Ten plant growth promoting rhizobacteria strains containing ACC-deaminase were isolated and characterized. Four selected isolates Fd2 (Achromobacter xylosoxidans), Bac5 (Serratia ureilytica), Oci9 (Herbaspirillum seropedicae) and Oci13 (Ochrobactrum rhizosphaerae) had the potential to protect Ocimum plants from flood induced damage under waterlogged glass house conditions. Pot experiments were conducted to evaluate the potential of these ACC deaminase-containing selected strains for reducing the yield losses caused by waterlogging conditions. Bacterial treatments protected plants from waterlogging induced detrimental changes like stress ethylene production, reduced chlorophyll concentration, higher lipid peroxidation, proline concentration and reduced foliar nutrient uptake. Fd2 (A. xylosoxidans) induced maximum waterlogging tolerance as treated waterlogged plants recorded maximum growth and herb yield (46.5% higher than uninoculated waterlogged plants) with minimum stress ethylene levels (53% lower ACC concentration as compared to waterlogged plants without bacterial inoculation) whereas under normal non-waterlogged conditions O. rhizosphaerae was most effective in plant growth promotion.
Journal of Plant Physiology | 2014
Deepti Barnawal; Nidhi Bharti; Deepamala Maji; Chandan S. Chanotiya; Alok Kalra
Induction of stress ethylene production in the plant system is one of the consequences of salt stress which apart from being toxic to the plant also inhibits mycorrhizal colonization and rhizobial nodulation by oxidative damage. Tolerance to salinity in pea plants was assessed by reducing stress ethylene levels through ACC deaminase-containing rhizobacteria Arthrobacter protophormiae (SA3) and promoting plant growth through improved colonization of beneficial microbes like Rhizobium leguminosarum (R) and Glomus mosseae (G). The experiment comprised of treatments with combinations of SA3, G, and R under varying levels of salinity. The drop in plant biomass associated with salinity stress was significantly lesser in SA3 treated plants compared to non-treated plants. The triple interaction of SA3+G+R performed synergistically to induce protective mechanism against salt stress and showed a new perspective of plant-microorganism interaction. This tripartite collaboration increased plant weight by 53%, reduced proline content, lipid peroxidation and increased pigment content under 200 mM salt condition. We detected that decreased ACC oxidase (ACO) activity induced by SA3 and reduced ACC synthase (ACS) activity in AMF (an observation not reported earlier as per our knowledge) inoculated plants simultaneously reduced the ACC content by 60% (responsible for generation of stress ethylene) in SA3+G+R treated plants as compared to uninoculated control plants under 200 mM salt treatment. The results indicated that ACC deaminase-containing SA3 brought a putative protection mechanism (decrease in ACC content) under salt stress, apart from alleviating ethylene-induced damage, by enhancing nodulation and AMF colonization in the plants resulting in improved nutrient uptake and plant growth.
Microbial Ecology | 2015
Nidhi Bharti; Deepti Barnawal; Deepamala Maji; Alok Kalra
The resilience of soil microbial populations and processes to environmental perturbation is of increasing interest as alteration in rhizosphere microbial community dynamics impacts the combined functions of plant–microbe interactions. The present study was conducted to investigate the effect of inoculation with halotolerant rhizobacteria Bacillus pumilus (STR2), Halomonas desiderata (STR8), and Exiguobacterium oxidotolerans (STR36) on the indigenous root-associated microbial (bacterial and fungal) communities in maize under non-saline and salinity stress. Plants inoculated with halotolerant rhizobacteria recorded improved growth as illustrated by significantly higher shoot and root dry weight and elongation in comparison to un-inoculated control plants under both non-saline and saline conditions. Additive main effect and multiplicative interaction ordination analysis revealed that plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) inoculations as well as salinity are major drivers of microbial community shift in maize rhizosphere. Salinity negatively impacts microbial community as analysed through diversity indices; among the PGPR-inoculated plants, STR2-inoculated plants recorded higher values of diversity indices. As observed in the terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis, the inoculation of halotolerant rhizobacteria prevents major shift of the microbial community structure, thus enhancing the resilience capacity of the microbial communities.
Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2015
Deepamala Maji; Manju Singh; Kundan Wasnik; Chandan S. Chanotiya; Alok Kalra
With the rising concerns about indiscriminate use of chemical fertilizers and accumulation of agro‐industrial wastes in huge quantities, the present experiment was conducted to elucidate the effect of a novel fungal strain of Trichoderma atroviride in hastening the compost/vermicompost production process and for the production of humic acid (HA) rich compost and vermicompost.
Biocontrol Science and Technology | 2013
Nidhi Bharti; Purvi Agrawal; Bishal Misra; Arpita Tripathi; Rakshpal Singh; Deepamala Maji; Hemendra Pratap Singh; Alok Kalra
Abstract Application of Thiosalicylic acid+Bacillus cereus; O-Acetylsalicylic acid+Pseudomonas fluorescens reduced root rot severity by 85 and 88% and enhanced root yields by 358 and 419%, respectively, against Fusarium solani induced root rot disease in Withania somnifera. Reduction in disease severity was correlated with defence-related enzymes peroxidase, polyphenol oxidase and phenyl ammonium lyase.
World Journal of Microbiology & Biotechnology | 2013
Nidhi Bharti; Deepti Yadav; Deepti Barnawal; Deepamala Maji; Alok Kalra
Journal of Plant Growth Regulation | 2013
Deepti Barnawal; Deepamala Maji; Nidhi Bharti; Chandan S. Chanotiya; Alok Kalra
Journal of Applied Phycology | 2014
Vikas Kumar Patel; Deepamala Maji; Anil K. Singh; M. R. Suseela; Shanthy Sundaram; Alok Kalra
Applied Soil Ecology | 2017
Deepamala Maji; Pooja Misra; Sucheta Singh; Alok Kalra
Algal Research-Biomass Biofuels and Bioproducts | 2016
Vikas Kumar Patel; Deepamala Maji; Shiv Shanker Pandey; Prasant Kumar Rout; Shanthy Sundaram; Alok Kalra