| Literature DB >> 22715335 |
Kateryna Zhalnina1, Patrícia Dörr de Quadros, Flavio A O Camargo, Eric W Triplett.
Abstract
Soil ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) are highly abundant and play an important role in the nitrogen cycle. In addition, AOA have a significant impact on soil quality. Nitrite produced by AOA and further oxidized to nitrate can cause nitrogen loss from soils, surface and groundwater contamination, and water eutrophication. The AOA discovered to date are classified in the phylum Thaumarchaeota. Only a few archaeal genomes are available in databases. As a result, AOA genes are not well annotated, and it is difficult to mine and identify archaeal genes within metagenomic libraries. Nevertheless, 16S rRNA and comparative analysis of ammonia monooxygenase sequences show that soils can vary greatly in the relative abundance of AOA. In some soils, AOA can comprise more than 10% of the total prokaryotic community. In other soils, AOA comprise less than 0.5% of the community. Many approaches have been used to measure the abundance and diversity of this group including DGGE, T-RFLP, q-PCR, and DNA sequencing. AOA have been studied across different soil types and various ecosystems from the Antarctic dry valleys to the tropical forests of South America to the soils near Mount Everest. Different studies have identified multiple soil factors that trigger the abundance of AOA. These factors include pH, concentration of available ammonia, organic matter content, moisture content, nitrogen content, clay content, as well as other triggers. Land use management appears to have a major effect on the abundance of AOA in soil, which may be the result of nitrogen fertilizer used in agricultural soils. This review summarizes the published results on this topic and suggests future work that will increase our understanding of how soil management and edaphoclimatic factors influence AOA.Entities:
Keywords: ammonia monooxygenase; ammonia-oxidizing archaea; soil
Year: 2012 PMID: 22715335 PMCID: PMC3375578 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2012.00210
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Ammonia-oxidizing archaea isolated from different environments.
| # | AOA | Environment | Source of isolation | Classification | Culture | Genome sequence | Reference | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Marine | Gravel from a marine tropical fish tank | 1.1a | Pure | + | USA | ||
| 2 | Marine symbiont | Marine sponge Axinellamexicana | 1.1a | – | + | USA | ||
| 3 | Soil, hot springs | Enrichment cultures from microbial mats of the Siberian Garga hot spring | 1.1b | Enriched | + | Austria | ||
| 4 | Soil | Garden soil in Vienna, Austria | 1.1b | Pure | + | Austria | ||
| 5 | Rhizosphere | Soil sample from the rhizosphere of Caraganasinica | 1.1a | Enriched | + | Republic | ||
| 6 | Sediments | Sediments in the low-salinity region of San Francisco Bay | 1.1a | Enriched | + | USA | ||
| 7 | Hot springs | Yellowstone National Park,hot springs | ThAOA | Enriched | - | USA | ||
| 8 | Soil | Acidic agricultural soil | 1.1a- | Enriched | - | UK |