Cargando…

Simulated Atmospheric N Deposition Alters Fungal Community Composition and Suppresses Ligninolytic Gene Expression in a Northern Hardwood Forest

High levels of atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition may result in greater terrestrial carbon (C) storage. In a northern hardwood ecosystem, exposure to over a decade of simulated N deposition increased C storage in soil by slowing litter decay rates, rather than increasing detrital inputs. To underst...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Edwards, Ivan P., Zak, Donald R., Kellner, Harald, Eisenlord, Sarah D., Pregitzer, Kurt S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3119081/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21701691
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0020421
_version_ 1782206539047632896
author Edwards, Ivan P.
Zak, Donald R.
Kellner, Harald
Eisenlord, Sarah D.
Pregitzer, Kurt S.
author_facet Edwards, Ivan P.
Zak, Donald R.
Kellner, Harald
Eisenlord, Sarah D.
Pregitzer, Kurt S.
author_sort Edwards, Ivan P.
collection PubMed
description High levels of atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition may result in greater terrestrial carbon (C) storage. In a northern hardwood ecosystem, exposure to over a decade of simulated N deposition increased C storage in soil by slowing litter decay rates, rather than increasing detrital inputs. To understand the mechanisms underlying this response, we focused on the saprotrophic fungal community residing in the forest floor and employed molecular genetic approaches to determine if the slower decomposition rates resulted from down-regulation of the transcription of key lignocellulolytic genes, by a change in fungal community composition, or by a combination of the two mechanisms. Our results indicate that across four Acer-dominated forest stands spanning a 500-km transect, community-scale expression of the cellulolytic gene cbhI under elevated N deposition did not differ significantly from that under ambient levels of N deposition. In contrast, expression of the ligninolytic gene lcc was significantly down-regulated by a factor of 2–4 fold relative to its expression under ambient N deposition. Fungal community composition was examined at the most southerly of the four sites, in which consistently lower levels of cbhI and lcc gene expression were observed over a two-year period. We recovered 19 basidiomycete and 28 ascomycete rDNA 28S operational taxonomic units; Athelia, Sistotrema, Ceratobasidium and Ceratosebacina taxa dominated the basidiomycete assemblage, and Leotiomycetes dominated the ascomycetes. Simulated N deposition increased the proportion of basidiomycete sequences recovered from forest floor, whereas the proportion of ascomycetes in the community was significantly lower under elevated N deposition. Our results suggest that chronic atmospheric N deposition may lower decomposition rates through a combination of reduced expression of ligninolytic genes such as lcc, and compositional changes in the fungal community.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3119081
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-31190812011-06-23 Simulated Atmospheric N Deposition Alters Fungal Community Composition and Suppresses Ligninolytic Gene Expression in a Northern Hardwood Forest Edwards, Ivan P. Zak, Donald R. Kellner, Harald Eisenlord, Sarah D. Pregitzer, Kurt S. PLoS One Research Article High levels of atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition may result in greater terrestrial carbon (C) storage. In a northern hardwood ecosystem, exposure to over a decade of simulated N deposition increased C storage in soil by slowing litter decay rates, rather than increasing detrital inputs. To understand the mechanisms underlying this response, we focused on the saprotrophic fungal community residing in the forest floor and employed molecular genetic approaches to determine if the slower decomposition rates resulted from down-regulation of the transcription of key lignocellulolytic genes, by a change in fungal community composition, or by a combination of the two mechanisms. Our results indicate that across four Acer-dominated forest stands spanning a 500-km transect, community-scale expression of the cellulolytic gene cbhI under elevated N deposition did not differ significantly from that under ambient levels of N deposition. In contrast, expression of the ligninolytic gene lcc was significantly down-regulated by a factor of 2–4 fold relative to its expression under ambient N deposition. Fungal community composition was examined at the most southerly of the four sites, in which consistently lower levels of cbhI and lcc gene expression were observed over a two-year period. We recovered 19 basidiomycete and 28 ascomycete rDNA 28S operational taxonomic units; Athelia, Sistotrema, Ceratobasidium and Ceratosebacina taxa dominated the basidiomycete assemblage, and Leotiomycetes dominated the ascomycetes. Simulated N deposition increased the proportion of basidiomycete sequences recovered from forest floor, whereas the proportion of ascomycetes in the community was significantly lower under elevated N deposition. Our results suggest that chronic atmospheric N deposition may lower decomposition rates through a combination of reduced expression of ligninolytic genes such as lcc, and compositional changes in the fungal community. Public Library of Science 2011-06-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3119081/ /pubmed/21701691 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0020421 Text en Edwards et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Edwards, Ivan P.
Zak, Donald R.
Kellner, Harald
Eisenlord, Sarah D.
Pregitzer, Kurt S.
Simulated Atmospheric N Deposition Alters Fungal Community Composition and Suppresses Ligninolytic Gene Expression in a Northern Hardwood Forest
title Simulated Atmospheric N Deposition Alters Fungal Community Composition and Suppresses Ligninolytic Gene Expression in a Northern Hardwood Forest
title_full Simulated Atmospheric N Deposition Alters Fungal Community Composition and Suppresses Ligninolytic Gene Expression in a Northern Hardwood Forest
title_fullStr Simulated Atmospheric N Deposition Alters Fungal Community Composition and Suppresses Ligninolytic Gene Expression in a Northern Hardwood Forest
title_full_unstemmed Simulated Atmospheric N Deposition Alters Fungal Community Composition and Suppresses Ligninolytic Gene Expression in a Northern Hardwood Forest
title_short Simulated Atmospheric N Deposition Alters Fungal Community Composition and Suppresses Ligninolytic Gene Expression in a Northern Hardwood Forest
title_sort simulated atmospheric n deposition alters fungal community composition and suppresses ligninolytic gene expression in a northern hardwood forest
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3119081/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21701691
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0020421
work_keys_str_mv AT edwardsivanp simulatedatmosphericndepositionaltersfungalcommunitycompositionandsuppressesligninolyticgeneexpressioninanorthernhardwoodforest
AT zakdonaldr simulatedatmosphericndepositionaltersfungalcommunitycompositionandsuppressesligninolyticgeneexpressioninanorthernhardwoodforest
AT kellnerharald simulatedatmosphericndepositionaltersfungalcommunitycompositionandsuppressesligninolyticgeneexpressioninanorthernhardwoodforest
AT eisenlordsarahd simulatedatmosphericndepositionaltersfungalcommunitycompositionandsuppressesligninolyticgeneexpressioninanorthernhardwoodforest
AT pregitzerkurts simulatedatmosphericndepositionaltersfungalcommunitycompositionandsuppressesligninolyticgeneexpressioninanorthernhardwoodforest