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Distinct Community Composition of Previously Uncharacterized Denitrifying Bacteria and Fungi across Different Land-Use Types.


ABSTRACT: Recent studies demonstrated that phylogenetically more diverse and abundant bacteria and fungi than previously considered are responsible for denitrification in terrestrial environments. We herein examined the effects of land-use types on the community composition of those denitrifying microbes based on their nitrite reductase gene (nirK and nirS) sequences. These genes can be phylogenetically grouped into several clusters. We used cluster-specific PCR primers to amplify nirK and nirS belonging to each cluster because the most widely used primers only amplify genes belonging to a single cluster. We found that the dominant taxa as well as overall community composition of denitrifying bacteria and fungi, regardless of the cluster they belonged to, differed according to the land-use type. We also identified distinguishing taxa based on individual land-use types, the distribution of which has not previously been characterized, such as denitrifying bacteria or fungi dominant in forest soils, Rhodanobacter having nirK, Penicillium having nirK, and Bradyrhizobium having nirS. These results suggest that land-use management affects the ecological constraints and consequences of denitrification in terrestrial environments through the assembly of distinct communities of denitrifiers.

SUBMITTER: Fujimura R 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7104279 | biostudies-literature | 2020

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Distinct Community Composition of Previously Uncharacterized Denitrifying Bacteria and Fungi across Different Land-Use Types.

Fujimura Reiko R   Azegami Yoichi Y   Wei Wei W   Kakuta Hiroko H   Shiratori Yutaka Y   Ohte Nobuhito N   Senoo Keishi K   Otsuka Shigeto S   Isobe Kazuo K  

Microbes and environments 20200101 1


Recent studies demonstrated that phylogenetically more diverse and abundant bacteria and fungi than previously considered are responsible for denitrification in terrestrial environments. We herein examined the effects of land-use types on the community composition of those denitrifying microbes based on their nitrite reductase gene (nirK and nirS) sequences. These genes can be phylogenetically grouped into several clusters. We used cluster-specific PCR primers to amplify nirK and nirS belonging  ...[more]

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