24 Sep Culture
24 Sep Culture
24 Sep Culture
33983400
0099-2240/99/$04.000
Copyright 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
A new approach that permits culture-independent identification of microorganisms that respond to specified
stimuli was developed. This approach was illustrated by examination of microorganisms that grew in response
to various nutrient supplements added to soil. A thymidine nucleotide analog, bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), and
supplements were added to soil and incubated for 3 days. DNA was extracted from the soil, and the newly
synthesized DNA was isolated by immunocapture of the BrdU-labeled DNA. The unique perspective this
approach offers was demonstrated by comparing the microbial community structures obtained from total soil
DNA and the BrdU-labeled fraction in an rRNA gene (rDNA) analysis. The traditional total DNA analysis
revealed no notable differences between the treatments, whereas the BrdU-labeled DNA showed significantly
different banding patterns between the nutrient supplement treatments and compared with total DNA banding
patterns. PCR primers were developed to specifically amplify the intergenic region of an rDNA sequence unique
to the BrdU analysis of a phosphate supplement treatment. Amplification of DNA from all treatments using
these primers showed that it was unique to the phosphate treatment and that it was present in both the total
DNA and BrdU-labeled DNA fractions. This result demonstrates the promise of this new strategy, because it
was able to permit identification of a sequence from a phosphate-responsive organism that was not discernable
in the traditional total DNA community structure analysis.
The majority of extant microorganisms have yet to be described, and fewer than one percent of these can be cultured by
standard methods (1, 7). The extent of this diversity was exemplified by a study which used genetic complexity measurements
to calculate that 4,000 completely different bacteria genomes
inhabited a Norwegian forest soil sample (19). Recently, descriptions of rRNA genes (rDNA) obtained from environmental samples have provided both a glimpse of this extensive
microbial diversity and a tool to identify uncultured organisms
(1, 14). However, progress beyond the classification stage of
microbial ecology to the physiological stage has been primarily
limited to community-level analyses such as microbial respiration, substrate utilization, N2 fixation, signature lipid biomarkers, and enzyme activities (9).
To correlate the activity of specific microorganisms with
defined environmental or physiological parameters, Stahl et al.
pioneered the use of rRNA hybridization probes to monitor
population levels and shifts (17). However, this strategy requires the prior identification and characterization of meaningful sequences. Given the immense complexity of most natural microbial communities, identification of such sequences is
a daunting task. A random analysis of rRNA or rDNA sequences from an environmental sample would likely lead to the
identification of the dominant organisms in that community
but not necessarily the ones involved in a particular physiological response. This report describes a new approach to bridge
the gap between function and phylogeny by permitting the
identification of populations that grow in response to specified
or measured stimuli.
added to sieved soil samples throughout a 3-day period and incubated in petri
dishes at room temperature. On day 1, H2O and glucose were mixed into the soil
samples (500 l of H2O was added to treatments C and D, 550 l of H2O was
added to treatment B, and 50 l of 888 mM glucose was added to treatments C
and D). On day 2, H2O and supplements were mixed into the soil samples (250
l of H2O was added to treatments B and C, 200 l of H2O was added to
treatment D, 50 l of 100 mM bromodeoxyuridine [BrdU] was added to treatments A to D, and 50 l of 89 mM KH2PO4 was added to treatment D). On day
3, H2O and supplements were mixed into the soil samples (50 l of H2O was
added to treatments B to D, and 50 l of 100 mM BrdU was added to treatments
A to D). On day 4, DNA was extracted from the soil samples with the FastDNA
Kit For Soil as described by the manufacturer (BIO 101, Vista, Calif.) (4).
BrdU immunocapture. Immunocapture of BrdU-labeled DNA was performed
by a modification of the method described by Haider et al. (8). Twenty-five
microliters of Dynabeads (M-450) coated with sheep anti-mouse immunoglobulin G was washed three times with 200 l of phosphate-buffered salinebovine
serum albumin (PBS-BSA [PBS containing 0.1% BSA]) as described by the
manufacturer (Dynal, Lake Success, N.Y.). These beads were resuspended in 84
l of PBS-BSA-herring (PBS-BSA containing 5 mg of herring sperm DNA
[Promega, Madison, Wis.] per ml) and incubated with 16 l of anti-BrdU antibody (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, Ind.) for 60 min at room temperature while being rotated. This mixture was washed three times with 200 l of
PBS-BSA and resuspended in 80 l of PBS-BSA-herring. Twenty microliters of
denatured soil DNA (95C for 5 min, 5 min on ice) was added to this suspension
and incubated at room temperature for 120 min while being rotated. This mixture was washed three times with 200 l of PBS-BSA and resuspended in 40 l
of H2O. This suspension was heated at 95C for 5 min and cooled on ice for 5
min, and the non-bead fraction was collected by magnetic capture. After this
work was completed, an alternative procedure to isolate BrdU-labeled DNA was
described (20). Comparison of the two procedures showed that the protocol
described by Urbach et al. (20) is preferable, as it isolated less unlabeled DNA
(data not shown).
Community structure analysis. Community structure analysis was performed
by resolving PCR-amplified 16S-23S rRNA intergenic fragments on a denaturing
polyacrylamide gel (5). The intergenic spacer region between the small- and
large-subunit rRNA genes was amplified in 150-l PCR mixtures with the following final concentrations or total amounts: 20 ng of soil DNA or 1 ng of
BrdU-labeled DNA, 50 mM Tris (pH 8.3), 500 g of BSA per ml, 2.5 mM MgCl2,
250 M deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs), 200 nM forward primer 1406F
TGYACACACCGCCCGT (10), 200 nM reverse primer 23R GGGTTBCCCC
ATTCRG, and 7.5 U of Taq DNA polymerase. All reagents were combined and
heated at 94C for 2 min. For the soil DNA, 25 cycles of PCR were performed;
for the BrdU-labeled DNA, 35 cycles were performed. PCRs were done with an
Air Thermo-Cycler (Idaho Technologies, Idaho Falls, Idaho) at 94C for 15 s,
52C for 15 s, and 72C for 30 s, followed by 72C for 2 min. PCR products were
purified with the QIAquick PCR Purification Kit (Qiagen, Valencia, Calif.),
3399
3400
BORNEMAN
FIG. 3. Validation of a specific rRNA gene sequence from a phosphateresponsive organism by PCR. Lanes: 9, no-template negative control; 10, 1-kb
ladder (Gibco BRL, Grand Island, N.Y.).
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