Abundance of narG, nirS, nirK, and nosZ genes of denitrifying bacteria during primary successions of a glacier foreland

Archive ouverte

Kandeler, Ellen | Deiglmayr, Kathrin | Tscherko, Dagmar | Bru, David | Philippot, Laurent, L.

Edité par CCSD ; American Society for Microbiology -

International audience. Quantitative PCR of denitrification genes encoding the nitrate, nitrite, and nitrous oxide reductases was used to study denitrifiers across a glacier foreland. Environmental samples collected at different distances from a receding glacier contained amounts of 16S rRNA target molecules ranging from 4.9 x 105 to 8.9 x 105 copies per nanogram of DNA but smaller amounts of narG, nirK, and nosZ target molecules. Thus, numbers of narG, nirK, nirS, and nosZ copies per nanogram of DNA ranged from 2.1 x 103 to 2.6 x 104, 7.4 x 102 to 1.4 x 103, 2.5 x 102 to 6.4 x 103, and 1.2 x 103 to 5.5 x 103, respectively. The densities of 16S rRNA genes per gram of soil increased with progressing soil development. The densities as well as relative abundances of different denitrification genes provide evidence that different denitrifier communities develop under primary succession: higher percentages of narG and nirS versus 16S rRNA genes were observed in the early stage of primary succession, while the percentages of nirK and nosZ genes showed no significant increase or decrease with soil age. Statistical analyses revealed that the amount of organic substances was the most important factor in the abundance of eubacteria as well as of nirK and nosZ communities, and copy numbers of these two genes were the most important drivers changing the denitrifying community along the chronosequence. This study yields an initial insight into the ecology of bacteria carrying genes for the denitrification pathway in a newly developing alpine environment.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Abundance of NARG, NIRK and NOSZ genes of denirifying bacteria during primary successions of a glacier foreland

Archive ouverte | Philippot, Laurent, L. | CCSD

International audience

Distribution of high bacterial taxa across the chronosequence of two alpine glacier forelands

Archive ouverte | Philippot, Laurent, L. | CCSD

International audience. Little is known about the changes in abundance of microbial taxa in relation to the chronosequence of receding glaciers. This study investigated how the abundances of ten bacterial phyla or c...

Primary succession changes diversity, abundance and function of soil microorganisms across glacier forelands

Archive ouverte | Kandeler, Ellen | CCSD

International audience

Chargement des enrichissements...