Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002527
Title: Simultaneous assessment of soil microbial community structure and function through analysis of the meta-transcriptome
Authors: Urich T.
Lanz閚 A.
Qi J.
Huson D.H. 
Schleper C.
Schuster S.C.
Keywords: ammonia
carbon dioxide
complementary DNA
messenger RNA
ribosome RNA
RNA
bacterial RNA
messenger RNA
ribosome RNA
article
biodiversity
carbon dioxide fixation
community structure
controlled study
Crenarchaeota
gene expression profiling
genome size
microbial community
nonhuman
nucleotide sequence
oxidation
polymerase chain reaction
pyrosequencing
reverse transcription
RNA sequence
sequence alignment
sequence database
soil microflora
taxonomy
transcriptomics
ecosystem
genetics
microbiology
species difference
Crenarchaeota
Eukaryota
Prokaryota
Ecosystem
RNA, Bacterial
RNA, Messenger
RNA, Ribosomal
Soil Microbiology
Species Specificity
Issue Date: 2008
Citation: Urich T., Lanz閚 A., Qi J., Huson D.H., Schleper C., Schuster S.C. (2008). Simultaneous assessment of soil microbial community structure and function through analysis of the meta-transcriptome. PLoS ONE 3 (6) : e2527. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002527
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Background: Soil ecosystems harbor the most complex prokaryotic and eukaryotic microbial communities on Earth. Experimental approaches studying these systems usually focus on either the soil community's taxonomic structure or its functional characteristics. Many methods target DNA as marker molecule and use PCR for amplification. Methodology/Principal Findings: Here we apply an RNA-centered meta-transcriptomic approach to simultaneously obtain information on both structure and function of a soil community. Total community RNA is random reversely transcribed into cDNA without any PCR or cloning step. Direct pyrosequencing produces large numbers of cDNA rRNA-tags; these are taxonomically profiled in a binding approach using the MEGAN software and two specifically compiled rRNA reference databases containing small and large subunit rRNA sequences. The pyrosequencing also produces mRNA-tags; these provide a sequence-based transcriptome of the community. One soil dataset of 258,411 RNA-tags of ?98 bp length contained 193,219 rRNA-tags with valid taxonomic information, together with 21,133 mRNA-tags. Quantitative information about the relative abundance of organism from all three domains of life and from different trophic levels was obtained in a single experiment. Less frequent taxa, such as soil Crenarchaeota, were well represented in the data set. These were identified by more than 2,000 rRNA-tags; furthrmore, their activity in situ was revealed through the presence of mRNA-tags specific for enzymes involved in ammonia oxidation and CO2 fixation. Conclusions/Significance: This approach could be widely applied in microbial ecology by efficiently linking community structure and function in a single experiment while avoiding biases inherent in other methods. � 2008 Urich et al.
Source Title: PLoS ONE
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/161852
ISSN: 19326203
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002527
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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