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Dive into the research topics where G. Naresh Kumar is active.

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Featured researches published by G. Naresh Kumar.


Plant and Soil | 2002

Role of soil microorganisms in improving P nutrition of plants

P. Gyaneshwar; G. Naresh Kumar; L.J. Parekh; Philip S. Poole

Phosphorus (P) is one of the major plant growth-limiting nutrients although it is abundant in soils in both inorganic and organic forms. Phosphate solubilizing micro-organisms (PSMs) are ubiquitous in soils and could play an important role in supplying P to plants in a more environmentally friendly and sustainable manner. Although solubilization of P compounds by microbes is very common under laboratory conditions, results in the field have been highly variable. This variability has hampered the large-scale use of PSMs in agriculture. Many reasons have been suggested for this variability, but none of them have been extensively investigated. In spite of the importance of PSMs in agriculture, the detailed biochemical and molecular mechanisms of P solubilization are not known. Recent work in our laboratory has shown that the conditions employed to isolate PSMs do not reflect soil conditions and that PSMs capable of effectively releasing P from soil are not so highly abundant as was suggested in earlier studies. These studies have also indicated that the mineral phosphate solubilizing (mps) ability of microbes could be linked to specific genes, and that these genes are present even in non P solubilizing bacteria. Understanding the genetic basis of P solubilization could help in transforming more rhizosphere-competent bacteria into PSMs. Further research should also focus on the microbial solubilization of iron (Fe) and aluminum (Al) phosphates, as well as mobilization of the organic phosphate reserves present in the soils.


World Journal of Microbiology & Biotechnology | 1998

Effect of buffering on the phosphate-solubilizing ability of microorganisms

P. Gyaneshwar; G. Naresh Kumar; L.J. Parekh

Native microflora present in the alkaline vertisols and two phosphate-solubilizing bacteria (PSB) isolated from soil using conventional screening media could not release phosphorus from alkaline Indian vertisol soils supplemented with carbon and nitrogen sources. The two PSBs could solubilize both rock phosphate and di-calcium phosphate in unbuffered media but failed to solubilize rock phosphate in buffered media. The organic acids secreted by these PSBs were 20–50 times less than that required to solubilize phosphorus from alkaline soil.


Current Microbiology | 2008

Variation in the Nature of Organic Acid Secretion and Mineral Phosphate Solubilization by Citrobacter sp. DHRSS in the Presence of Different Sugars

Divya K. Patel; G. Archana; G. Naresh Kumar

A novel phosphate solubilizing bacterium (PSB) was isolated from the rhizosphere of sugarcane and is capable of utilizing sucrose and rock phosphate as the sole carbon and phosphate source, respectively. This PSB exhibited mineral phosphate solubilizing (MPS) phenotype on sugars such as sucrose and fructose, which are not substrates for enzyme glucose dehydrogenase (GDH), along with GDH substrates, viz., glucose, xylose, and maltose, as carbon sources. PCR amplification of the rRNA gene and sequence analysis identified this bacterium as Citrobacter sp. DHRSS. On sucrose and fructose Citrobacter sp. DHRSS liberated 170 and 100 μM free phosphate from rock phosphate and secreted 49 mM (2.94 g/L) and 35 mM (2.1 g/L) acetic acid, respectively. Growth of Citrobacter sp. DHRSS on sucrose is mediated by an intracellular inducible neutral invertase. Interestingly, in the presence of GDH substrates like glucose and maltose, Citrobacter sp. DHRSS produced approximately 20 mM (4.36 g/L) gluconic acid and phosphate released was 520 and 570 μM, respectively. Citrobacter sp. DHRSS GDH activity was found when grown on GDH and non-GDH substrates, indicating that it is constitutive and could act on a wide range of aldose sugars. This study demonstrates the role of different organic acids in mineral phosphate solubilization by rhizobacteria depending on the nature of the available carbon source.


Research in Microbiology | 2008

Metabolic channeling of glucose towards gluconate in phosphate-solubilizing Pseudomonas aeruginosa P4 under phosphorus deficiency

Aditi D. Buch; G. Archana; G. Naresh Kumar

Most phosphate-solubilizing bacteria (PSB), including the Pseudomonas species, release P from sparingly soluble mineral phosphates by producing high levels of gluconic acid from extracellular glucose, in a reaction catalyzed by periplasmic glucose dehydrogenase, which is an integral component of glucose catabolism of pseudomonads. To investigate the differences in the glucose metabolism of gluconic acid-producing PSB pseudomonads and low gluconic acid-producing/non-PSB strains, several parameters pertaining to growth and glucose utilization under P-sufficient and P-deficient conditions were monitored for the PSB isolate Pseudomonas aeruginosa P4 (producing approximately 46 mM gluconic acid releasing 437 microM P) and non-PSB P. fluorescens 13525. Our results show interesting differences in the channeling of glucose towards gluconate and other catabolic end-products like pyruvate and acetate with respect to P status for both strains. However, PSB strain P. aeruginosa P4, apart from exhibiting better growth under both low and high Pi conditions, differed from P. fluorescens 13525 in its ability to accumulate gluconate under P-solubilizing conditions. These alterations in growth, glucose utilization and acid secretion are correlated with glucose dehydrogenase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and pyruvate carboxylase activities. The ability to shift glucose towards a direct oxidative pathway under P deficiency is speculated to underlie the differential gluconic acid-mediated P-solubilizing ability observed amongst pseudomonads.


Microbiology | 2009

Enhanced citric acid biosynthesis in Pseudomonas fluorescens ATCC 13525 by overexpression of the Escherichia coli citrate synthase gene

Aditi D. Buch; G. Archana; G. Naresh Kumar

Citric acid secretion by fluorescent pseudomonads has a distinct significance in microbial phosphate solubilization. The role of citrate synthase in citric acid biosynthesis and glucose catabolism in pseudomonads was investigated by overexpressing the Escherichia coli citrate synthase (gltA) gene in Pseudomonas fluorescens ATCC 13525. The resultant approximately 2-fold increase in citrate synthase activity in the gltA-overexpressing strain Pf(pAB7) enhanced the intracellular and extracellular citric acid yields during the stationary phase, by about 2- and 26-fold, respectively, as compared to the control, without affecting the growth rate, glucose depletion rate or biomass yield. Decreased glucose consumption was paralleled by increased gluconic acid production due to an increase in glucose dehydrogenase activity. While the extracellular acetic acid yield increased in Pf(pAB7), pyruvic acid secretion decreased, correlating with an increase in pyruvate carboxylase activity and suggesting an increased demand for the anabolic precursor oxaloacetate. Activities of two other key enzymes, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and isocitrate dehydrogenase, remained unaltered, and the contribution of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and isocitrate lyase to glucose catabolism was negligible. Strain Pf(pAB7) demonstrated an enhanced phosphate-solubilizing ability compared to the control. Co-expression of the Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase and E. coli gltA genes in P. fluorescens ATCC 13525, so as to supplement oxaloacetate for citrate biosynthesis, neither significantly affected citrate biosynthesis nor caused any change in the other physiological and biochemical parameters measured, despite approximately 1.3- and 5-fold increases in citrate synthase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activities, respectively. Thus, our results demonstrate that citrate synthase is rate-limiting in enhancing citrate biosynthesis in P. fluorescens ATCC 13525. Significantly low extracellular citrate levels as compared to the intracellular levels in Pf(pAB7) suggested a probable limitation of efficient citrate transport.


Bioresource Technology | 2010

Heterologous expression of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase enhances the phosphate solubilizing ability of fluorescent pseudomonads by altering the glucose catabolism to improve biomass yield.

Aditi D. Buch; G. Archana; G. Naresh Kumar

The Synechococcus elongatus PCC 6301 phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (ppc) gene was constitutively overexpressed in fluorescent pseudomonads, to increase the supply of oxaloacetate, a crucial anabolic precursor and an intermediate in biosynthesis of organic acids implicated in phosphate (P) solubilization. Pseudomonas fluorescens ATCC 13525, transformed with pAB3 plasmid containing the ppc gene showed a 14-fold increase in PPC activity under P-sufficiency resulting in increased carbon flow through the direct oxidative pathway and reduced metabolic overflow. Under P-limitation, contribution of the direct oxidative pathway significantly increased in P. fluorescens ATCC 13525; however, ppc overexpression enhanced glucose catabolism through intracellular phosphorylative pathway. These results correlated with gluconic, pyruvic and acetic acid levels as well as the activities of key glucose catabolic enzymes. Irrespective of the P-status, ppc overexpression improved biomass yield without altering growth rate, resulting in improved P- solubilizing abilities of P. fluorescens ATCC 13525 as well as of the wheat rhizosphere fluorescent pseudomonads isolates Fp585, P109 and Fp315. Collectively, ppc overexpression reversed the P-status dependent glucose distribution between the direct oxidative and phosphorylative pathways of glucose catabolism in P. fluorescens ATCC 13525 and presents a feasible genetic engineering approach for developing efficient P-solubilizing bacteria.


Bioresource Technology | 2011

Repression of mineral phosphate solubilizing phenotype in the presence of weak organic acids in plant growth promoting fluorescent pseudomonads

Divya K. Patel; Prayag Murawala; G. Archana; G. Naresh Kumar

Two phosphate solubilizing bacteria (PSB), M3 and SP1, were obtained from the rhizosphere of mungbean and sweet potato, respectively and identified as strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Their rock phosphate (RP) solubilizing abilities were found to be due to secretion high amount of gluconic acid. In the presence of malate and succinate, individually and as mixture, the P solubilizing ability of both the strains was considerably reduced. This was correlated with a nearly 80% decrease in the activity of the glucose dehydrogenase (GDH) but not gluconate dehydrogenase (GAD) in both the isolates. Thus, GDH enzyme, catalyzing the periplasmic production of gluconic acid, is under reverse catabolite repression control by organic acids in P. aeruginosa M3 and SP1. This is of relevance in rhizospheric conditions and is a new explanation for the lack of field efficacy of such PSB.


Archives of Microbiology | 2013

Repression of oxalic acid-mediated mineral phosphate solubilization in rhizospheric isolates of Klebsiella pneumoniae by succinate

Mahendrapal Singh Rajput; G. Naresh Kumar; Shalini Rajkumar

Two strains of Klebsiella (SM6 and SM11) were isolated from rhizospheric soil that solubilized mineral phosphate by secretion of oxalic acid from glucose. Activities of enzymes for periplasmic glucose oxidation (glucose dehydrogenase) and glyoxylate shunt (isocitrate lyase and glyoxylate oxidase) responsible for oxalic acid production were estimated. In presence of succinate, phosphate solubilization was completely inhibited, and the enzymes glucose dehydrogenase and glyoxylate oxidase were repressed. Significant activity of isocitrate lyase, the key enzyme for carbon flux through glyoxylate shunt and oxalic acid production during growth on glucose suggested that it could be inducible in nature, and its inhibition by succinate appeared to be similar to catabolite repression.


Microbial Biotechnology | 2012

Remodulation of central carbon metabolic pathway in response to arsenite exposure in Rhodococcus sp. strain NAU-1

Raina Jain; Hemanta Adhikary; Sanjay Jha; Anamika Jha; G. Naresh Kumar

Arsenite‐tolerant bacteria were isolated from an organic farm of Navsari Agricultural University (NAU), Gujarat, India (Latitude: 20°55′39.04″N; Longitude: 72°54′6.34″E). One of the isolates, NAU‐1 (aerobic, Gram‐positive, non‐motile, coccobacilli), was hyper‐tolerant to arsenite (AsIII, 23 mM) and arsenate (AsV, 180 mM). 16S rRNA gene of NAU‐1 was 99% similar to the 16S rRNA genes of Rhodococcus (Accession No. HQ659188). Assays confirmed the presence of membrane bound arsenite oxidase and cytoplasmic arsenate reductase in NAU‐1. Genes for arsenite transporters (arsB and ACR3(1)) and arsenite oxidase gene (aoxB) were confirmed by PCR. Arsenite oxidation and arsenite efflux genes help the bacteria to tolerate arsenite. Specific activities of antioxidant enzymes (catalase, ascorbate peroxidase, superoxide dismutase and glutathione S‐transferase) increased in dose‐dependent manner with arsenite, whereas glutathione reductase activity decreased with increase in AsIII concentration. Metabolic studies revealed that Rhodococcus NAU‐1 produces excess of gluconic and succinic acids, and also activities of glucose dehydrogenase, phosphoenol pyruvate carboxylase and isocitrate lyase were increased, to cope with the inhibited activities of glucose‐6‐phosphate dehydrogenase, pyruvate dehydrogenase and α‐ketoglutarate dehydrogenase enzymes respectively, in the presence of AsIII. Enzyme assays revealed the increase in direct oxidative and glyoxylate pathway in Rhodococcus NAU‐1 in the presence of AsIII.


Microbiological Research | 2011

Plasmid load adversely affects growth and gluconic acid secretion ability of mineral phosphate-solubilizing rhizospheric bacterium Enterobacter asburiae PSI3 under P limited conditions

Vikas Sharma; G. Archana; G. Naresh Kumar

Effect of the metabolic load caused by the presence of plasmids on mineral phosphate-solubilizing (MPS) Enterobacter asburiae PSI3, was monitored with four plasmid cloning vectors and one native plasmid, varying in size, nature of the replicon, copy number and antibiotic resistance genes. Except for one plasmid, the presence of all other plasmids in E. asburiae PSI3 resulted in the loss of the MPS phenotype as reflected by the failure to bring about a drop in pH and release soluble P when grown in media containing rock phosphate (RP) as the sole P source. When 100 μM soluble P was supplemented along with RP, the adverse effects of plasmids on MPS phenotype and on growth parameters was reduced for some plasmid bearing derivatives, as monitored in terms of specific growth rates, glucose consumed, gluconic acids yields and P released. When 10 mM of soluble P as the only P source, was added to the medium all transformants showed growth and pH drop comparable with native strain. It may be concluded that different plasmids impose, to varying extents, a metabolic load in the phosphate-solubilizing bacterium E. asburiae PSI3 and results in diminishing its growth and P-solubilizing ability in P deficient conditions.

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G. Archana

Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda

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Aditi D. Buch

Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda

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Chanchal Kumar

Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda

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Jitendra Wagh

Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda

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Sanjay Jha

Navsari Agricultural University

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Archana Chaudhari

Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda

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Hemanta Adhikary

Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda

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Kavita Yadav

Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda

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L.J. Parekh

Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda

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Raina Jain

Navsari Agricultural University

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