| Literature DB >> 25749323 |
Witoon Purahong1, Barbara Stempfhuber2, Guillaume Lentendu3, Davide Francioli4, Thomas Reitz4, François Buscot5, Michael Schloter6, Dirk Krüger4.
Abstract
Due to the high diversity of bacteria in many ecosystems, their slow generation times, specific but mostly unknown nutrient requirements and syntrophic interactions, isolation based approaches in microbial ecology mostly fail to describe microbial community structure. Thus, cultivation independent techniques, which rely on directly extracted nucleic acids from the environment, are a well-used alternative. For example, bacterial automated ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis (B-ARISA) is one of the widely used methods for fingerprinting bacterial communities after PCR-based amplification of selected regions of the operon coding for rRNA genes using community DNA. However, B-ARISA alone does not provide any taxonomic information and the results may be severely biased in relation to the primer set selection. Furthermore, amplified DNA stemming from mitochondrial or chloroplast templates might strongly bias the obtained fingerprints. In this study, we determined the applicability of three different B-ARISA primer sets to the study of bacterial communities. The results from in silico analysis harnessing publicly available sequence databases showed that all three primer sets tested are specific to bacteria but only two primers sets assure high bacterial taxa coverage (1406f/23Sr and ITSF/ITSReub). Considering the study of bacteria in a plant interface, the primer set ITSF/ITSReub was found to amplify (in silico) sequences of some important crop species such as Sorghum bicolor and Zea mays. Bacterial genera and plant species potentially amplified by different primer sets are given. These data were confirmed when DNA extracted from soil and plant samples were analyzed. The presented information could be useful when interpreting existing B-ARISA results and planning B-ARISA experiments, especially when plant DNA can be expected.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25749323 PMCID: PMC4351999 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0118967
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Proportion of bacterial taxa with positive virtual amplification in the wgs-embl-pro database revealed by ecoPCR.
| Taxonomic rank | No. of taxa | Primer set 1406F/23Sr | Primer set ITSF/ITSReub | Primer set S-D-Bact-1522-b-S-20/L-D-Bact-132-a-A-18 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 mismatch | 1 mismatch | 0 mismatch | 1 mismatch | 0 mismatch | 1 mismatch | ||
| phylum | 19 | 84.2 | 89.5 | 36.8 | 68.4 | 0 | 52.6 |
| class | 32 | 78.1 | 87.5 | 43.8 | 59.4 | 0 | 46.9 |
| order | 72 | 83.3 | 91.7 | 44.4 | 63.9 | 0 | 31.9 |
| family | 163 | 79.8 | 87.1 | 49.7 | 64.4 | 0 | 34.4 |
| genus | 483 | 65.4 | 72.7 | 33.3 | 48.9 | 0 | 16.8 |
| species | 1389 | 48.2 | 56.7 | 28.9 | 40.3 | 0 | 12.0 |
Fig 1Number of potentially amplified species for different prokaryotic phyla in the wgs-embl-pro database revealed by ecoPCR by increasing mismatches allowed on both forward and reverse primers.
The overlaid heatmap (white = 0, darkest = maximum number of sequences) illustrates rising anticipated amplification success with increasing mismatches and was applied per row (i.e. heatmap is proportional to the sequence number available per phylum). The in-cell bar illustrates the relative contribution of the phyla in the used database.
Fig 2NMDS ordination plots of bacterial community structure in soil (a, c) and wood (b, d) samples using different primer sets: 1406f/23Sr (a, b) and ITSF/ITSReub (c, d).
Stress values from the NMDS ordinations and R based on Bray-Curtis (R ) and Jaccard (R ) distance measures are shown on the right. Square = fertilized soil, circle = unfertilized soil, hexagon = Picea abies, triangle = Fagus sylvatica. Each number (1 to 5) represents one individual replicate.