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Culture-Dependent and -Independent Methods Capture Different Microbial Community Fractions in Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Soils

Bioremediation is a cost-effective and sustainable approach for treating polluted soils, but our ability to improve on current bioremediation strategies depends on our ability to isolate microorganisms from these soils. Although culturing is widely used in bioremediation research and applications, i...

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Autores principales: Stefani, Franck O. P., Bell, Terrence H., Marchand, Charlotte, de la Providencia, Ivan E., El Yassimi, Abdel, St-Arnaud, Marc, Hijri, Mohamed
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4460130/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26053848
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0128272
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author Stefani, Franck O. P.
Bell, Terrence H.
Marchand, Charlotte
de la Providencia, Ivan E.
El Yassimi, Abdel
St-Arnaud, Marc
Hijri, Mohamed
author_facet Stefani, Franck O. P.
Bell, Terrence H.
Marchand, Charlotte
de la Providencia, Ivan E.
El Yassimi, Abdel
St-Arnaud, Marc
Hijri, Mohamed
author_sort Stefani, Franck O. P.
collection PubMed
description Bioremediation is a cost-effective and sustainable approach for treating polluted soils, but our ability to improve on current bioremediation strategies depends on our ability to isolate microorganisms from these soils. Although culturing is widely used in bioremediation research and applications, it is unknown whether the composition of cultured isolates closely mirrors the indigenous microbial community from contaminated soils. To assess this, we paired culture-independent (454-pyrosequencing of total soil DNA) with culture-dependent (isolation using seven different growth media) techniques to analyse the bacterial and fungal communities from hydrocarbon-contaminated soils. Although bacterial and fungal rarefaction curves were saturated for both methods, only 2.4% and 8.2% of the bacterial and fungal OTUs, respectively, were shared between datasets. Isolated taxa increased the total recovered species richness by only 2% for bacteria and 5% for fungi. Interestingly, none of the bacteria that we isolated were representative of the major bacterial OTUs recovered by 454-pyrosequencing. Isolation of fungi was moderately more effective at capturing the dominant OTUs observed by culture-independent analysis, as 3 of 31 cultured fungal strains ranked among the 20 most abundant fungal OTUs in the 454-pyrosequencing dataset. This study is one of the most comprehensive comparisons of microbial communities from hydrocarbon-contaminated soils using both isolation and high-throughput sequencing methods.
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spelling pubmed-44601302015-06-16 Culture-Dependent and -Independent Methods Capture Different Microbial Community Fractions in Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Soils Stefani, Franck O. P. Bell, Terrence H. Marchand, Charlotte de la Providencia, Ivan E. El Yassimi, Abdel St-Arnaud, Marc Hijri, Mohamed PLoS One Research Article Bioremediation is a cost-effective and sustainable approach for treating polluted soils, but our ability to improve on current bioremediation strategies depends on our ability to isolate microorganisms from these soils. Although culturing is widely used in bioremediation research and applications, it is unknown whether the composition of cultured isolates closely mirrors the indigenous microbial community from contaminated soils. To assess this, we paired culture-independent (454-pyrosequencing of total soil DNA) with culture-dependent (isolation using seven different growth media) techniques to analyse the bacterial and fungal communities from hydrocarbon-contaminated soils. Although bacterial and fungal rarefaction curves were saturated for both methods, only 2.4% and 8.2% of the bacterial and fungal OTUs, respectively, were shared between datasets. Isolated taxa increased the total recovered species richness by only 2% for bacteria and 5% for fungi. Interestingly, none of the bacteria that we isolated were representative of the major bacterial OTUs recovered by 454-pyrosequencing. Isolation of fungi was moderately more effective at capturing the dominant OTUs observed by culture-independent analysis, as 3 of 31 cultured fungal strains ranked among the 20 most abundant fungal OTUs in the 454-pyrosequencing dataset. This study is one of the most comprehensive comparisons of microbial communities from hydrocarbon-contaminated soils using both isolation and high-throughput sequencing methods. Public Library of Science 2015-06-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4460130/ /pubmed/26053848 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0128272 Text en © 2015 Stefani 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
Stefani, Franck O. P.
Bell, Terrence H.
Marchand, Charlotte
de la Providencia, Ivan E.
El Yassimi, Abdel
St-Arnaud, Marc
Hijri, Mohamed
Culture-Dependent and -Independent Methods Capture Different Microbial Community Fractions in Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Soils
title Culture-Dependent and -Independent Methods Capture Different Microbial Community Fractions in Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Soils
title_full Culture-Dependent and -Independent Methods Capture Different Microbial Community Fractions in Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Soils
title_fullStr Culture-Dependent and -Independent Methods Capture Different Microbial Community Fractions in Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Soils
title_full_unstemmed Culture-Dependent and -Independent Methods Capture Different Microbial Community Fractions in Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Soils
title_short Culture-Dependent and -Independent Methods Capture Different Microbial Community Fractions in Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Soils
title_sort culture-dependent and -independent methods capture different microbial community fractions in hydrocarbon-contaminated soils
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4460130/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26053848
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0128272
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