| Literature DB >> 34285994 |
Joseph Edwards1, Christian Santos-Medellín1, Venkatesan Sundaresan1,2.
Abstract
Plant roots associate with a wide diversity of bacteria and archaea across the root-soil spectrum. The rhizosphere microbiota, the communities of microbes in the soil adjacent to the root, can contain up to 10 billion bacterial cells per gram of soil (Raynaud and Nunan, 2014) and can play important roles for the fitness of the host plant. Subsets of the rhizospheric microbiota can colonize the root surface (rhizoplane) and the root interior (endosphere), forming an intimate relationship with the host plant. Compositional analysis of these communities is important to develop tools in order to manipulate root-associated microbiota for increased crop productivity. Due to the reduced cost and increasing throughput of next-generation sequencing, major advances in deciphering these communities have recently been achieved, mainly through the use of amplicon sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene. Here we first present a protocol for dissecting the microbiota from various root compartments, developed using rice as a model. We next present a method for amplifying fragments of the 16S rRNA gene using a dual index approach. Finally, we present a simple workflow for analyzing the resulting sequencing data to make ecological inferences.Entities:
Keywords: Amplicon sequencing; Endosphere; Rhizoplane; Rhizosphere; Root microbiome
Year: 2018 PMID: 34285994 PMCID: PMC8275237 DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.2884
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bio Protoc ISSN: 2331-8325