Publication | Open Access
The ammonia monooxygenase structural gene amoA as a functional marker: molecular fine-scale analysis of natural ammonia-oxidizing populations
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45
References
1997
Year
Functional MarkerGeneticsMolecular GeneticsGenomicsRedox BiologyPhylogenetic AnalysisReactive Nitrogen SpecieRice RootsMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyMicrobial DiversityAldehyde DehydrogenaseBiochemistryNatural Ammonia-oxidizing PopulationsFunctional GenomicsBioinformaticsBiologyMicrobial SystematicsNatural SciencesMolecular Fine-scale AnalysisGenetic HeterogeneityMicrobiologyMedicineAmoa Gene LibrariesMicrobial Genetics
A PCR‑based assay targeting a partial amoA gene was developed to assess genetic heterogeneity of beta‑proteobacterial ammonia‑oxidizers across diverse environments, and the resulting amplicons were used to construct gene libraries. The assay specifically amplified a 491‑bp amoA fragment in all tested nitrifiers, detected amoA in diverse aquatic and terrestrial samples, yielded no false positives, and revealed distinct Nitrosospira‑like populations in rice roots and novel lineages in freshwater, demonstrating amoA’s high specificity, fine‑scale resolution, and functional relevance.
The naturally occurring genetic heterogeneity of autotrophic ammonia-oxidizing populations belonging to the beta subclass of the Proteobacteria was studied by using a newly developed PCR-based assay targeting a partial stretch of the gene which encodes the active-site polypeptide of ammonia monooxygenase (amoA). The PCR yielded a specific 491-bp fragment with all of the nitrifiers tested, but not with the homologous stretch of the particulate methane monooxygenase, a key enzyme of methane-oxidizing bacteria. The assay also specifically detected amoA in DNA extracted from various aquatic and terrestrial environments. The resulting PCR products retrieved from rice roots, activated sludge, a freshwater sample, and an enrichment culture were used for the generation of amoA gene libraries. No false positives were detected in a set of 47 randomly selected clone sequences that were analyzed further. The majority of the environmental sequences retrieved from rice roots and activated sludge grouped within the phylogenetic radiation defined by cultured strains of the genera Nitrosomonas and Nitrosospira. The comparative analysis identified members of both of these genera in activated sludge; however, only Nitrosospira-like sequences with very similar amino acid patterns were found on rice roots. Further differentiation of these molecular isolates was clearly possible on the nucleic acid level due to the accumulation of synonymous mutations, suggesting that several closely related but distinct Nitrosospira-like populations are the main colonizers of the rhizosphere of rice. Each of the amoA gene libraries obtained from the freshwater sample and the enrichment culture was dominated by a novel lineage that shared a branch with the Nitrosospira cluster but could not be assigned to any of the known pure cultures. Our data suggest that amoA represents a very powerful molecular tool for analyzing indigenous ammonia-oxidizing communities due to (i) its specificity, (ii) its fine-scale resolution of closely related populations, and (iii) the fact that a functional trait rather than a phylogenetic trait is detected.
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