16S rRNA Gene Survey of Microbial Communities in Winogradsky Columns

被引:26
作者
Rundell, Ethan A. [1 ]
Banta, Lois M. [2 ]
Ward, Doyle V. [3 ]
Watts, Corey D. [2 ]
Birren, Bruce [3 ]
Esteban, David J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Vassar Coll, Dept Biol, Poughkeepsie, NY 12601 USA
[2] Williams Coll, Dept Biol, Williamstown, MA 01267 USA
[3] Broad Inst, Genome Sequencing Ctr, Cambridge, MA USA
关键词
RARE BIOSPHERE; SP-NOV; BODY HABITATS; DIVERSITY; BACTERIAL; SEDIMENT; METAGENOMICS; SEQUENCES; ARCHAEAL; DEPTH;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0104134
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
A Winogradsky column is a clear glass or plastic column filled with enriched sediment. Over time, microbial communities in the sediment grow in a stratified ecosystem with an oxic top layer and anoxic sub-surface layers. Winogradsky columns have been used extensively to demonstrate microbial nutrient cycling and metabolic diversity in undergraduate microbiology labs. In this study, we used high-throughput 16s rRNA gene sequencing to investigate the microbial diversity of Winogradsky columns. Specifically, we tested the impact of sediment source, supplemental cellulose source, and depth within the column, on microbial community structure. We found that the Winogradsky columns were highly diverse communities but are dominated by three phyla: Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and Firmicutes. The community is structured by a founding population dependent on the source of sediment used to prepare the columns and is differentiated by depth within the column. Numerous biomarkers were identified distinguishing sample depth, including Cyanobacteria, Alphaproteobacteria, and Betaproteobacteria as biomarkers of the soil-water interface, and Clostridia as a biomarker of the deepest depth. Supplemental cellulose source impacted community structure but less strongly than depth and sediment source. In columns dominated by Firmicutes, the family Peptococcaceae was the most abundant sulfate reducer, while in columns abundant in Proteobacteria, several Deltaproteobacteria families, including Desulfobacteraceae, were found, showing that different taxonomic groups carry out sulfur cycling in different columns. This study brings this historical method for enrichment culture of chemolithotrophs and other soil bacteria into the modern era of microbiology and demonstrates the potential of the Winogradsky column as a model system for investigating the effect of environmental variables on soil microbial communities.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 58 条
[1]   Integrating Genomics Research throughout the Undergraduate Curriculum: A Collection of Inquiry-Based Genomics Lab Modules [J].
Banta, Lois M. ;
Crespi, Erica J. ;
Nehm, Ross H. ;
Schwarz, Jodi A. ;
Singer, Susan ;
Manduca, Cathryn A. ;
Bush, Eliot C. ;
Collins, Elizabeth ;
Constance, Cara M. ;
Dean, Derek ;
Esteban, David ;
Fox, Sean ;
McDaris, John ;
Paul, Carol Ann ;
Quinan, Ginny ;
Raley-Susman, Kathleen M. ;
Smith, Marc L. ;
Wallace, Christopher S. ;
Withers, Ginger S. ;
Caporale, Lynn .
CBE-LIFE SCIENCES EDUCATION, 2012, 11 (03) :203-203
[2]  
Bayer EA, 2006, PROKARYOTES: A HANDBOOK ON THE BIOLOGY OF BACTERIA, VOL 2, THIRD EDITION, P578, DOI 10.1007/0-387-30742-7_19
[3]   Salt marsh sediment diversity: a test of the variability of the rare biosphere among environmental replicates [J].
Bowen, Jennifer L. ;
Morrison, Hilary G. ;
Hobbie, John E. ;
Sogin, Mitchell L. .
ISME JOURNAL, 2012, 6 (11) :2014-2023
[4]   Microbial community composition in sediments resists perturbation by nutrient enrichment [J].
Bowen, Jennifer L. ;
Ward, Bess B. ;
Morrison, Hilary G. ;
Hobbie, John E. ;
Valiela, Ivan ;
Deegan, Linda A. ;
Sogin, Mitchell L. .
ISME JOURNAL, 2011, 5 (09) :1540-1548
[5]   Salt marsh sediment bacteria: their distribution and response to external nutrient inputs [J].
Bowen, Jennifer L. ;
Crump, Byron C. ;
Deegan, Linda A. ;
Hobbie, John E. .
ISME JOURNAL, 2009, 3 (08) :924-934
[6]   Archaeal and bacterial community composition of sediment and plankton from a suboxic freshwater pond [J].
Briee, Celine ;
Moreira, David ;
Lopez-Garcia, Purificacion .
RESEARCH IN MICROBIOLOGY, 2007, 158 (03) :213-227
[7]   ALLPATHS: De novo assembly of whole-genome shotgun microreads [J].
Butler, Jonathan ;
MacCallum, Iain ;
Kleber, Michael ;
Shlyakhter, Ilya A. ;
Belmonte, Matthew K. ;
Lander, Eric S. ;
Nusbaum, Chad ;
Jaffe, David B. .
GENOME RESEARCH, 2008, 18 (05) :810-820
[8]   Global patterns of 16S rRNA diversity at a depth of millions of sequences per sample [J].
Caporaso, J. Gregory ;
Lauber, Christian L. ;
Walters, William A. ;
Berg-Lyons, Donna ;
Lozupone, Catherine A. ;
Turnbaugh, Peter J. ;
Fierer, Noah ;
Knight, Rob .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2011, 108 :4516-4522
[9]   QIIME allows analysis of high-throughput community sequencing data [J].
Caporaso, J. Gregory ;
Kuczynski, Justin ;
Stombaugh, Jesse ;
Bittinger, Kyle ;
Bushman, Frederic D. ;
Costello, Elizabeth K. ;
Fierer, Noah ;
Pena, Antonio Gonzalez ;
Goodrich, Julia K. ;
Gordon, Jeffrey I. ;
Huttley, Gavin A. ;
Kelley, Scott T. ;
Knights, Dan ;
Koenig, Jeremy E. ;
Ley, Ruth E. ;
Lozupone, Catherine A. ;
McDonald, Daniel ;
Muegge, Brian D. ;
Pirrung, Meg ;
Reeder, Jens ;
Sevinsky, Joel R. ;
Tumbaugh, Peter J. ;
Walters, William A. ;
Widmann, Jeremy ;
Yatsunenko, Tanya ;
Zaneveld, Jesse ;
Knight, Rob .
NATURE METHODS, 2010, 7 (05) :335-336
[10]   The Winogradsky plate, a convenient and efficient method for the enrichment of anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria [J].
Charlton, PJ ;
McGrath, JE ;
Harfoot, CG .
JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGICAL METHODS, 1997, 30 (02) :161-163