4.8 Article

Structure, fluctuation and magnitude of a natural grassland soil metagenome

Journal

ISME JOURNAL
Volume 6, Issue 9, Pages 1677-1687

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2011.197

Keywords

soil metagenomics; phylogenetic; pyrosequencing; structural biodiversity; functional biodiversity

Funding

  1. Rhone-Alpes Region
  2. French National Research Agency (ANR) [ANR-08-GENM-025]
  3. European Union [KBBE-2007-3-3-05, 22625]
  4. BBSRC [BBS/E/C/00004961, BBS/E/C/00005189, BBS/E/C/00005196] Funding Source: UKRI
  5. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [BBS/E/C/00004961, BBS/E/C/00005189, BBS/E/C/00005196] Funding Source: researchfish

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The soil ecosystem is critical for human health, affecting aspects of the environment from key agricultural and edaphic parameters to critical influence on climate change. Soil has more unknown biodiversity than any other ecosystem. We have applied diverse DNA extraction methods coupled with high throughput pyrosequencing to explore 4.88 x 10(9) bp of metagenomic sequence data from the longest continually studied soil environment (Park Grass experiment at Rothamsted Research in the UK). Results emphasize important DNA extraction biases and unexpectedly low seasonal and vertical soil metagenomic functional class variations. Clustering-based subsystems and carbohydrate metabolism had the largest quantity of annotated reads assigned although <50% of reads were assigned at an E value cutoff of 10(-5). In addition, with the more detailed subsystems, cAMP signaling in bacteria (3.24 +/- 0.27% of the annotated reads) and the Ton and Tol transport systems (1.69 +/- 0.11%) were relatively highly represented. The most highly represented genome from the database was that for a Bradyrhizobium species. The metagenomic variance created by integrating natural and methodological fluctuations represents a global picture of the Rothamsted soil metagenome that can be used for specific questions and future inter-environmental metagenomic comparisons. However, only 1% of annotated sequences correspond to already sequenced genomes at 96% similarity and E values of <10(-5), thus, considerable genomic reconstructions efforts still have to be performed. The ISME Journal (2012) 6, 1677-1687; doi:10.1038/ismej.2011.197; published online 2 February 2012 Subject Category: integrated genomics and post-genomics approaches in microbial ecology

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available