4.6 Article

Identification of sulfate-reducing magnetotactic bacteria via a group-specific 16S rDNA primer and correlative fluorescence and electron microscopy: Strategy for culture-independent study

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 11, Pages 5019-5038

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.16109

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41920104009, 41890843, 41621004]
  2. Innovation Group Project of Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai) [311021003]
  3. Australian Research Council [DP160100805, DP200100765]
  4. Senior User Project(Center for Ocean Mega-Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences) [RVKEXUE2019GZ06]

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This study proposes a new molecular biology method for identifying and studying magnetotactic bacteria (MTB) in natural environments. The results identify three novel MTB strains and describe their magnetosome biomineralization characteristics. This is significant for expanding our knowledge of MTB and developing strategies for studying uncultured MTB in natural environments.
Magnetotactic bacteria (MTB) biomineralize intracellular magnetic nanocrystals and swim along geomagnetic field lines. While few axenic MTB cultures exist, living cells can be separated magnetically from natural environments for analysis. The bacterial universal 27F/1492R primer pair has been used widely to amplify nearly full-length 16S rRNA genes and to provide phylogenetic portraits of MTB communities. However, incomplete coverage and amplification biases inevitably prevent detection of some phylogenetically specific or non-abundant MTB. Here, we propose a new formulation of the upstream 390F primer that we combined with the downstream 1492R primer to specifically amplify 1100-bp 16S rRNA gene sequences of sulfate-reducing MTB in freshwater sediments from Lake Weiyanghu, Xi'an, northwestern China. With correlative fluorescence in situ hybridization and scanning/transmission electron microscopy, three novel MTB strains (WYHR-2, WYHR-3 and WYHR-4) from the Desulfobacterota phylum were identified phylogenetically and structurally at the single-cell level. Strain WYHR-2 produces bullet-shaped magnetosome magnetite, while the other two strains produce both cubic/prismatic greigite and bullet-shaped magnetite. Our results expand knowledge of bacterial diversity and magnetosome biomineralization of sulfate-reducing MTB. We also propose a general strategy for identifying and characterizing uncultured MTB from natural environments.

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