W. K. Kellogg Biological Station, Department of Microbiology & Molecular Genetics, Michigan State University, 3700 East Gull Lake Drive, Hickory Corners, MI 49060, USA.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2011 Jul;77(13):4589-96. doi: 10.1128/AEM.02735-10. Epub 2011 May 6.
Rapid responses of bacteria to sudden changes in their environment can have important implications for the structure and function of microbial communities. In this study, we used heavy-water stable isotope probing (H2(18)O-SIP) to identify bacteria that respond to soil rewetting. First, we conducted experiments to address uncertainties regarding the H2(18)O-SIP method. Using liquid chromatography-mass spectroscopy (LC-MS), we determined that oxygen from H2(18)O was incorporated into all structural components of DNA. Although this incorporation was uneven, we could effectively separate 18O-labeled and unlabeled DNAs derived from laboratory cultures and environmental samples that were incubated with H2(18)O. We found no evidence for ex vivo exchange of oxygen atoms between DNA and extracellular H2O, suggesting that 18O incorporation into DNA is relatively stable. Furthermore, the rate of 18O incorporation into bacterial DNA was high (within 48 to 72 h), coinciding with pulses of CO2 generated from soil rewetting. Second, we examined shifts in the bacterial composition of grassland soils following rewetting, using H2(18)O-SIP and bar-coded pyrosequencing of 16S rRNA genes. For some groups of soil bacteria, we observed coherent responses at a relatively course taxonomic resolution. Following rewetting, the relative recovery of Alphaproteobacteria, Betaproteobacteria, and Gammaproteobacteria increased, while the relative recovery of Chloroflexi and Deltaproteobacteria decreased. Together, our results suggest that H2(18)O-SIP is effective at identifying metabolically active bacteria that influence soil carbon dynamics. Our results contribute to the ecological classification of soil bacteria while providing insight into some of the functional traits that influence the structure and function of microbial communities under dynamic soil moisture regimes.
细菌对环境中突然变化的快速响应可能对微生物群落的结构和功能具有重要意义。在这项研究中,我们使用重水稳定同位素探测(H2(18)O-SIP)来鉴定对土壤复湿有反应的细菌。首先,我们进行了实验,以解决 H2(18)O-SIP 方法的不确定性。通过液相色谱-质谱联用(LC-MS),我们确定 H2(18)O 中的氧被掺入 DNA 的所有结构成分中。尽管这种掺入是不均匀的,但我们可以有效地分离出用 H2(18)O 孵育的实验室培养物和环境样品中标记和未标记的 DNA。我们没有发现 DNA 与细胞外 H2O 之间氧原子的体外交换证据,表明 DNA 中 18O 的掺入相对稳定。此外,18O 掺入细菌 DNA 的速度很高(在 48 到 72 小时内),与土壤复湿产生的 CO2 脉冲一致。其次,我们使用 H2(18)O-SIP 和 16S rRNA 基因的条形码焦磷酸测序,研究了草地土壤复湿后细菌组成的变化。对于一些土壤细菌群体,我们在相对粗略的分类分辨率下观察到了一致的响应。复湿后,α变形菌门、β变形菌门和γ变形菌门的相对回收率增加,而绿弯菌门和δ变形菌门的相对回收率降低。总的来说,我们的结果表明 H2(18)O-SIP 有效地鉴定了影响土壤碳动态的代谢活跃细菌。我们的研究结果有助于对土壤细菌进行生态分类,同时为影响动态土壤水分条件下微生物群落结构和功能的一些功能特征提供了见解。