Pérez-Jiménez J R, Kerkhof L J
Biotechnology Center for Agriculture and Environment, Cook Campus, Rutgers University, 71 Dudley Rd., New Brunswick, NJ 08901-8521, USA.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2005 Feb;71(2):1004-11. doi: 10.1128/AEM.71.2.1004-1011.2005.
Sediment samples were collected worldwide from 16 locations on four continents (in New York, California, New Jersey, Virginia, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Italy, Latvia, and South Korea) to assess the extent of the diversity and the distribution patterns of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) in contaminated sediments. The SRB communities were examined by terminal restriction fragment (TRF) length polymorphism (TRFLP) analysis of the dissimilatory sulfite reductase genes (dsrAB) with NdeII digests. The fingerprints of dsrAB genes contained a total of 369 fluorescent TRFs, of which <20% were present in the GenBank database. The global sulfidogenic communities appeared to be significantly different among the anthropogenically impacted (petroleum-contaminated) sites, but nearly all were less diverse than pristine habitats, such as mangroves. A global SRB indicator species of petroleum pollution was not identified. However, several dsrAB gene sequences corresponding to hydrocarbon-degrading isolates or consortium members were detected in geographically widely separated polluted sites. Finally, a cluster analysis of the TRFLP fingerprints indicated that many SRB microbial communities were most similar on the basis of close geographic proximity (tens of kilometers). Yet, on larger scales (hundreds to thousands of kilometers) SRB communities could cluster with geographically widely separated sites and not necessarily with the site with the closest proximity. These data demonstrate that SRB populations do not adhere to a biogeographic distribution pattern similar to that of larger eukaryotic organisms, with the greatest species diversity radiating from the Indo-Pacific region. Rather, a patchy SRB distribution is encountered, implying an initially uniform SRB community that has differentiated over time.
在全球四大洲的16个地点(纽约、加利福尼亚、新泽西、弗吉尼亚、波多黎各、委内瑞拉、意大利、拉脱维亚和韩国)采集沉积物样本,以评估受污染沉积物中硫酸盐还原菌(SRB)的多样性程度和分布模式。通过对异化亚硫酸盐还原酶基因(dsrAB)进行NdeII酶切的末端限制性片段(TRF)长度多态性(TRFLP)分析来检测SRB群落。dsrAB基因的指纹图谱共包含369个荧光TRF,其中不到20%存在于GenBank数据库中。在受人为影响(石油污染)的地点中,全球产硫化物群落似乎存在显著差异,但几乎所有群落的多样性都低于原始栖息地,如红树林。未鉴定出石油污染的全球SRB指示物种。然而,在地理上广泛分布的污染地点检测到了几个与烃降解分离株或共生体成员相对应的dsrAB基因序列。最后,TRFLP指纹图谱的聚类分析表明,许多SRB微生物群落基于地理距离较近(几十公里)最为相似。然而,在更大尺度(数百到数千公里)上,SRB群落可能与地理上广泛分布的地点聚类,而不一定与距离最近的地点聚类。这些数据表明,SRB种群并不遵循与大型真核生物相似的生物地理分布模式,即物种多样性最高的区域是从印度-太平洋地区辐射开来的。相反,SRB的分布是零散的,这意味着最初均匀的SRB群落随着时间的推移已经分化。