You are on page 1of 11

European Journal of Soil Biology 47 (2011) 77e87

Contents lists available at ScienceDirect

European Journal of Soil Biology


journal homepage: http://www.elsevier.com/locate/ejsobi

Review

A review of molecular methods to study the microbiota of soil


and the mycosphere
J.D. van Elsas*, F.G.H. Boersma
Department of Microbial Ecology, CEES, University of Groningen, Kerklaan 30, 9750 RA Haren, Netherlands

a r t i c l e i n f o a b s t r a c t

Article history: The availability of novel and advanced molecular methods based on soil nucleic acids has revolutionized
Received 28 July 2010 our studies of the microbiota of soil. In particular, our understanding of the daunting diversity of soil
Received in revised form microbes has grown to maturity, opening up a new box of challenging research questions about
26 November 2010
microbial functioning and interactions. We here review recent developments in, as well as the state-
Accepted 30 November 2010
Available online 15 December 2010
of-the-art of, the molecular methods applied to soil, and discuss a few salient cases in which they have
Handling editor: Bryan Griffiths enhanced our understanding of the soil microbiota and its functioning. In particular, we place a focus on
the interface between soil fungal hyphae and the corresponding non-fungal-affected soil, i.e., the
Keywords:
mycosphere. This selective environment may reduce the diversity of its inhabitants, allowing an
Molecular methods improved picture of their ecology and functioning via molecular techniques. We present arguments for
Soil microbiota the contention that, to investigate testable hypotheses, a polyphasic approach is needed, in which work
Mycosphere on the basis of molecular approaches such as metagenomics and metatranscriptomics is coupled to that
based on culturable organisms. Thus, advances in our understanding of local functioning and adaptation
of bacterial mycosphere inhabitants will be fostered by combined metagenomics/metatranscriptomics
and cultivation-based approaches.
Ó 2010 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

1. Introduction for analyses were offered if DNA and/or ribosomal or messenger


RNA could be efficiently extracted from soil and subsequently
The analysis of microbial populations in natural habitats such as analyzed [2,3]. The molecularly-based methods specifically enable
soil is one of the cornerstones of current research on the func- to produce “snapshots” of the molecular make-up of whole
tioning of natural ecosystems. In traditional soil microbiological complex soil microbial communities, as well as of specific micro-
approaches, data on soil microorganisms have been obtained by organisms and genes therein. Although the term had not been
analyzing material derived from microbial growth, i.e., cells in coined at that time, this early stage of soil molecular microbiology
liquid cultures or colonies obtained by plating. Methods derived may be rightly called the era of early metagenomics or “Proto-
from microbiology, cellular biochemistry, molecular biology (DNA- metagenomics”. The Molecular Microbial Ecology Manual (editions
or RNA-based) and physiology have traditionally been used with I and II) bears testimony of the ultrafast developments in this area
such material. However, such methods have often met with strong over the past one to one-and-a-half decade [4,5].
limitations, the reason being that only a small fraction of the A now almost traditional way of performing a molecular
microbiota in soil can be accessed on the basis of cultivation. This assessment of soil microbial communities following cultivation
phenomenon has been coined the Great Plate Count Anomaly [1]. consists of colony hybridization, using suitable probes as proxies for
Researchers thus soon realized that the only sensible way to the identification of the colonies e grown on isolation plates e that
understand the complex soil microbial community was by devel- are examined. Early analyses of colony material have been based on
oping direct molecular assessments, for which pre-extraction of this method [6], which allowed the investigators to pinpoint the
cellular macromolecules like DNA and/or RNA was a prerequisite. In presence of particular genes in their cultured organisms. The
the light of the astounding development of analytical methods in method was later followed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-
molecular biology ever since the 1980-ies, exciting opportunities based assessments of colony material (colony PCR) directly from
isolation plates. Such cultivation-based molecular analyses allowed
the description of the population dynamics of specific culturable
* Corresponding author. bacteria in soil settings. However, they were inherently limited in
E-mail address: j.d.van.elsas@rug.nl (J.D. van Elsas). their scope due to the general unculturability of a majority of soil

1164-5563/$ e see front matter Ó 2010 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.ejsobi.2010.11.010
78 J.D. van Elsas, F.G.H. Boersma / European Journal of Soil Biology 47 (2011) 77e87

bacteria. On the other hand, the examination of organisms that are compartment which is under the influence of the hyphae of the
able to give a growth response is still highly crucial in many studies, fungus studied”. This definition does not clearly define the exact
and hence such analyses should be encouraged. In contrast, many dimensions of the soil compartment to be sampled. Thus, to
current assessments of soil microbial communities are based on the sensibly address the microbial communities of the mycosphere in
isolation of microbial DNA or RNA directly from soil samples [7e9]. a comparative fashion, it is extremely important to consider and
Following the isolation and purification of soil DNA/RNA, an array of apply standardized sampling procedures of the mycosphere.
analytical techniques is available to provide answers to the scien- A sensible approach developed in our laboratory [16] sampled the
tific question that is being posed. Such approaches should go hand- mushroom foot part, shaking the loose soil from the foot, thus
in-hand with the aforementioned cultivation-based approaches in obtaining a shallow layer of soil surrounding the mushroom foot
a polyphasic approach, as it often pays off to have bacterial isolates (Fig. 1). The bacteria inhabiting this area in soil were assumed to
handy next to direct molecular data. best represent the mycosphere microbiota. Thus, molecular anal-
This review will examine the molecular methods that are yses applied specifically to such samples in comparison to those of
currently applied to soil and mycosphere systems. We will first the bulk soil will shed light on the specific molecular features
provide an outline of the peculiarities of the mycosphere as (phylogenetically and/or functionally) of mycosphere inhabitants.
a particular microhabitat in the soil, after which we will examine
current procedures for the extraction and processing of microbial 3. Molecular analyses of the soil and mycosphere
nucleic acids from soil. Then, relevant analytical procedures are microbiota e soil nucleic acids as the basis
examined with respect to their power to detect, fingerprint,
sequence and quantify (targeted parts of) the microbiota. In 3.1. Nucleic acid extraction, with emphasis on soil DNA
particular, advanced methods for the analysis of the diversity and
community structures of soil-, plant- and mycosphere-associated The vast majority of current molecular analyses from soil is
bacterial communities are the focus [10,11]. Finally, we address the preceded by direct soil nucleic acid extractions [5]. Methods that
ins and outs of the application of molecular methods to allow access to soil nucleic acids originate from the eighties, and
the mycosphere, as a specific microhabitat compartment of soil. the reader is referred to some of the relevant pioneering studies
Table 1 gives an outline of the methods and their intricacies. [2,7,9,18]. Such methods commonly yielded both DNA and RNA
released from soil microbial communities. Since their inception,
2. Soil versus the mycosphere e issues of microhabitat there have been fast developments in these methods, culminating
sampling in the fact that current nucleic acid extraction protocols are almost
all (commercial) kit-based [8]. However, for specific purposes,
Bulk soil, although heterogeneous in nature, is often readily several non-kit based protocols are still in use [8]. Another key issue
sampled, and accepted sampling procedures based on statistical is that most (but not all) analyses have commonly targeted soil DNA
considerations are in place. However, common sample sizes for instead of RNA, the reason being the greater stability of DNA upon
molecular assessments, which are often less than 1 g, still seem to extraction. However, RNA-based protocols are in use in ribosomal
limit the scope of the investigator to the (micro)habitat that is marker-based studies (in the light of the greater number of ribo-
actually accessed. In contrast, the mycosphere poses a numbers of somes than chromosomes per cell), and they are obviously indis-
different problems to sampling. The mycosphere can be defined as pensable in studies on the transcriptome, focussing on messenger
the interface between soil fungal mycelium and the (bulk) soil RNA (for instance, [19]). The commercial extraction kits for DNA,
environment [12]. It encompasses the soil zone around the several of them finetuned to soil DNA, all guarantee robustness
hyphae of a range of soil fungi, e.g., soil ectomycorrhizae, arbuscular with respect to the quantity and quality of the DNA that is obtained.
mycorrhizae and/or saprotrophic fungi [13]. Next to the However, a fact of soil scientific life is that for each “new” soil, the
mycosphere, which is per definition extraradical, the mycorrhizo- performance of a particular extraction kit needs to be tested and
sphere e which includes influences from plant roots e can be validated [5,8]. Furthermore, it is imminent that, per scientific
recognized [11,14,15]. In the specific case of mushroom-forming study, the same standardized extraction protocol is used, as each
ecotomycorrhizal fungi, the mycosphere has been defined as the protocol will introduce its own biases with respect to quality and
narrow zone of soil around the bundled hyphae (hereafter called quantity of the extracted DNA [8,20,21].
the “bundle”) at the base of the mushroom [11,16]. The mycosphere Key issues in soil nucleic acid extraction are the efficiencies of
serves as a habitat for diverse bacteria that, specifically or the release of microbial cells from soil particles and the subsequent
stochastically, inhabit this interface. The interface is influenced by lysis of the former. Ideally, all cells in the sample are released and
compounds that become available from the fungal mycelium via subsequently lysed in one go, however this has been suggested to
direct secretion of organic acids like oxalic acid or trehalose [15] or be nearly impossible due to inherent problems of incomplete
compounds like glycerol [17] or via dying fungal cells. The myco- desorption of cells from soil particles, their ready readsorption and,
sphere does not a priori pose major problems for DNA/RNA finally, incomplete and biased cell lyses. In the light of the diversity
extractions using common procedures. However, a main challenge of the soil microbiota and the impossibility to have a “magic agent”
in studying this interface environment by molecular and/or culti- that captures and lyses all cells in a given sample, the key initial
vation means lies in the ability of the sampling procedure to dissect desorption and lysis steps are inevitably prone to biases. It follows
out the relevant portion of the soil that is impacted by fungal that, in any study on the soil microbiota, a particular “window” at
hyphae. As the hyphae, either underneath fungal fruiting bodies or the true extant diversity in the soil habitat is obtained. This window
directly in the soil hyphal network, are often small and fragile, is limited and biased per definition. Therefore, rigorous standardi-
sampling them in a representative manner and including the zation is required in comparative work in soil, to keep the putative
proper amount of surrounding mycosphere soil, is actually quite biases similar across samples or treatments. In this respect, it is
difficult. Thus, sampling of the mycosphere has not turned into important to recognize the difference between, on the one hand,
a routine practice yet, and it is therefore not well-defined. This the physical (e.g., bead beating based) and, on the other hand, the
stands in sharp contrast to sampling of the rhizosphere, which has enzymatic (soft) cell lysis methods [2,7,9]. Bead beating may result,
been standardized across laboratories. The difficulty is also reflec- following break-up of the cells, in enhanced shearing of the DNA of
ted in the definition of the mycosphere, which may read as “the soil those cells with the most fragile envelopes (those that first yield
Table 1
An overview of methods suitable for assessments of bacteria in soil and the mycosphere. Special emphasis is placed on both the promise and the potential caveats of these methods.

Method Reproducibility Interpretation of results Advantages Disadvantages Major pitfalls Remarks

J.D. van Elsas, F.G.H. Boersma / European Journal of Soil Biology 47 (2011) 77e87
Cultivation Medium Limited information on in situ Allows to further analyze colonies Low resolution, lacks Only culturable Cultivation-based analyses
(plating) active populations due to Great including metabolic characteristics representation. microorganisms key support for
Plate Count Anomaly or whole genome sequence Morphotypes hard found (only 1% molecularly-based observations
to distinguish. of community).
Soil nucleic acid extraction High Snapshot of extant microbiota in Easy access to genes of extant soil Prone to incomplete Chemical integrity and Nucleic acids as the basis of all
the form of information-carrying microbial community and biased sampling purity of soil DNA may molecular work: biases need
molecules limit analyses to be reduced
PCR/qPCR High Proxies of organisms or genes Routine techniques of high sensitivity; Several PCR biases and Only species >0.1e1% Key method for molecular
amplified and/or quantified allow detection and/or quantification artifacts, including abundance are visible detection from soil
inhibition
Fingerprintings (DGGE, TGGE, High Snapshot views of (dominant) Easy comparisons between samples, Only top-1000 of target Several pitfalls due to DGGE has turned into a routine
T-RFLP, SSCP, RISA, LH-PCR) microbial diversity and possibility of obtaining different community is accessed. nature of separation fingerprinting method. Care to
-phylogenetical community make-up, fingerprints from same sample techniques. DGGE be taken with the interpretations
-functional different sensitivity levels discussed in text due to biases
Clone libraries Medium Accounts of dominant sequence Easy census of target genes Laborious preparation Pitfalls due to Nice but limited overview of
types in the community in community; allows diversity of sample cloning bias target gene/organism diversity
estimates
Stable isotope High Direct information on incorporation Gives information on the active Problems of opportunists Relies on activity of Widely appreciated method to
probing and BrdU of label into community community. Relation between blurring the data microorganisms, describe in situ activities
members: highlights structure and function which can be very low
active bacteria can be elucidated
Microarrays Medium Parallel information on diversity, Currently very high throughput, direct Only chipped genes Problems due to Allows high-throughput analyses
at phylogenetic or functional levels information on sequences. Sensitive are found cross-hybridizations across habitats
with low-homology
sequences
High-throughput sequencing: Medium Large amounts of information on total All-in-once analysis in high-throughput. Methods are error-prone! Wrong interpretations Method of choice in many
-metagenome and active members of the community High potential for comparative studies due to artifacts/errors studies. Again, caution with
-metatranscriptome at sequence level interpretation of data needed

Reproducibility: divided in three classes: high (average SD below 10%), medium (average SD 10e25%) and high (average SD > 25%).

79
80 J.D. van Elsas, F.G.H. Boersma / European Journal of Soil Biology 47 (2011) 77e87

Fig. 1. An overview of methods that are recommended to study the diversity and function of bacterial inhabitants of the mycosphere. The combination of cultivation-independent
with cultivation-dependent methods is predicted to enable great advances in our understanding of the system.

free DNA). On the other hand, enzymatic lysis may not affect those In most laboratories, the nucleic acid extraction protocols of
bacteria that are resistant to too soft lysis, and these will thus choice are currently based on just a few commercial kits, e.g., those
escape detection. In both cases, substantial biases are introduced in produced under the names “Ultraclean” or “Powersoil” soil DNA
the analyses. The type of desorption and lysis thus determines our extraction kits (MoBio, USA) and/or the Fast DNA Spin kit for soil
ultimate view of the microbial community in the sample [8,22]. It (Bio101, USA). Combined with so-called Wizard (Promega, USA)
seems mandatory that attempts are made to optimize cell lysis in resin-based DNA purification steps, commercial extraction kits, in
accordance with the soil type and the bacterial taxon that is tar- particular Powersoil, have been found to reproducibly yield PCR-
geted. Furthermore, it should be recognized that, in different soils, amplifiable DNA from a variety of soils [8]. This has included sandy,
DNA/RNA extraction methods will most likely work differently. For clayey as well as organic-matter-rich soils. Representative DNA of
instance, the nucleic acids that are liberated may bind differently to adequate purity and reasonably high molecular weight has
soil particles (clay and organic matter) in soils of different texture consistently been obtained, which was suitable for subsequent PCR
or mineral composition. Comparison of the microbiota in different amplification analysis. However, a note of caution should be given
soil types may thus be hampered by this variable DNA extraction here, as the aforementioned biases with respect to incompleteness
efficiency. On the positive side, a reassuring degree of commonality of sampling of the extant nucleic acid diversity have not been
was found between bacterial communities in soils of similar (completely) solved. This implies that investigators applying direct
texture [23], which supported the contention that, across soils, in soil nucleic acid extraction methods accept the view that their
a grossly similar extraction background, similar types of potential depiction of the soil microbial community is, by nature, incomplete
biases will be encountered. and biased. On the other hand, a critical and comparative use of
Soil nucleic acid extraction (often consisting of processing a soil soil-extracted nucleic acids does provide the investigator with
sample, in several steps, up to the so-called crude lysate) is a very powerful data source, allowing him/her to directly picture, in
commonly followed by one or more purification steps, as the crude a snapshot approach, the microbial communities that abound in the
extract often still contains a substantial amount of compounds like soil system of study, e.g., the mycosphere.
humic or fulvic acids, which hamper subsequent analytical
methods that require PCR or labelling for hybridization. The 3.2. Molecular analyses of the soil microbiota e pioneering
required purification steps may incur losses of material, which studies using hybridization
should be minimized [24]. Ideally, purification steps are harmo-
nized across samples, as comparisons based on data from Early pioneering approaches set out to directly analyze micro-
DNA extracts that underwent different purification protocols bial community nucleic acids (mainly DNA) extracted from soil, the
may be scientifically unwarranted in the light of possible biases purpose being to obtain an overall view of the soil microbial
between these. community diversity and make-up. Thus, soil DNA samples can be
J.D. van Elsas, F.G.H. Boersma / European Journal of Soil Biology 47 (2011) 77e87 81

characterized in terms of their reannealing [18] and/or hybridiza- communities were quite different in these two contrasting envi-
tion behavior [25]. The first criterion, i.e., the rate of reannealing of ronments [35]. Although many studies use prior soil nucleic acid
molten soil DNA, has been taken as characteristic for the level of based PCR, the method has a number of potential biases, which need
complexity (diversity) of the microbial communities under study, strong consideration. First, PCR on the basis of so-called universal
the premise being that the more complex the microbial community bacterial primers that target (part of) a common gene like the rRNA
is, the lower the rate of reannealing of completely molten soil DNA gene will not amplify all extant bacterial diversity simply because
will be [18]. The second criterion (hybridization) has enabled primers used may miss a considerable part of the community [36].
investigators to assess the levels of commonality between soil Second, following PCR, the perceived diversity is prone to so-called
ecosystems, or even the prevalence of particular genes of interest in differential amplification, which means that particular targets
the community [26]. However, a major problem often encountered amplify at higher rate than other ones. Third, the same PCR may
with hybridization analyses performed directly on environmental yield hybrid molecules called chimeras, which result from so-called
DNA extracts is their general lack of sensitivity, which limits these “jumping PCR”. Such chimeras need to be removed e using for
analyses to populations of cells or genes that occur in relatively instance, the web-based programme CHECK_CHIMERA e from the
high numbers in the environmental samples [27]. Hence, further amplicons prior to further analyses, which is possible once
processing steps that offer increased analytical power (with respect sequences are known. Finally, as indicated, only targets that are
to the analysis of microbial community make-up) are required, dominant in the sample will be amplified, and hence PCR is biased
being PCR performed on environmental nucleic acids the obvious against the so-called “rare biosphere”. This latter problem can
choice. actually be circumvented by using group-specific primers, which
allow amplification of DNA from low-abundance organisms. For this
3.3. PCR underlies many nucleic acid based analytical purpose, primer sets e often consisting of nested or semi-nested
approaches systems e that target bacteria at the group level (e.g., the a, b, g-
proteobacteria or bacilli) have been developed. Alternatively,
3.3.1. PCR as the basis for highly-sensitive analytical approaches primer sets targeting specific taxa like the pseudomonads, meth-
to the soil microbiota ylobacteria and sphingomonads have been concocted and success-
A major step forward in the study of the soil microbiota via DNA fully applied [37e41]. These group-specific approaches have often
(and/or RNA) has been the development of direct PCR amplification provided greater insights in the ecology (dynamics) of the target
of target genes [28e30]. Such target genes include a phylogeneti- groups, as they reduce the complexity of the target community.
cally-tuned marker such as the 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene or Given the fact that the 16S rRNA genes may occur in multiple
the rpoB gene, or functional gene markers like amoA (encoding copies per genome, alternative single-copy markers, like rpoS
ammonia monooxygenase, a key enzyme in the oxidation of [42,43], gyrB [44] and recA [43] have been sought. So far, the use of
ammonia) or nifH (encoding nitrogenase reductase, a key enzyme these genes appears as a promising approach, as the poly-
in nitrogen fixation). Using PCR followed by cloning/sequencing or morphisms within them may well reflect evolutionary history and
fingerprinting approaches, information on the extant sequences of also contemporary diversity across the members of a targeted
the gene of choice can thus be obtained from soil nucleic acids. In community [45]. However, the limited amount of sequence
a seminal paper in which PCR amplification of 16S rRNA genes was information of these genes in the database stands in sharp
used following by cloning and sequencing, Liesack and Stack- contrast to the enormous number of 16S rRNA gene sequences
ebrandt [31] were the first to describe a totally novel bacterial that are present. This limitation for the alternative markers
phylum, denoted the Planctomycetales, from soil. Ribosomal RNA hampers sequence analysis and primer design. Naturally,
gene-based PCR analyses of soil and other environmental DNAs researchers will provide increasingly more sequence data to the
have, in many later studies, been primordial in the discovery of databases, enhancing sequence resolution. Conversely, it has been
a large number of novel bacterial radiations, and this process is still shown that, in particular for the pseudomonads, the resolving
ongoing [32]. Some of the novel phyla, e.g., TM7, are without power of the 16S rRNA gene is rather low. That is, pseudomonads
cultured representatives to date, although microcultivation tech- harboring very similar 16S rRNA genes may have quite different
niques have been partially successful [33,34]. In a similar fashion, ecological roles and hence differ strongly in particular accessory
PCR amplification of functional genes has allowed a depiction of the genes elsewhere on the genome. Recent work of Costa et al. [46],
diversities of such genes. which was based on the use of the global regulator gacA as the
PCR can be based on soil DNA or RNA, the latter following prior marker to separate the pseudomonads, revealed that this marker
reverse transcription (yielding cDNA). The method is based on the gene gave a significantly higher resolution than the 16S
cyclic enzymatic extension of a particular gene region (using rRNA gene.
temperature-driven cycles of denaturing and annealing), with two
primers that anneal at the opposite ends of the template. This 3.3.2. Quantitative PCR (qPCR)
results in the generation of numerous copies of the region spanned PCR of soil DNA can be used in a quantitative manner using a so-
by the two primers. Given the high denaturing temperature (often called Taqman or “real-time” approach [47]. The principle of this
94  C), the DNA polymerase used in PCR has to be resistant to high method lies in the generation of a fluorescent and detectable signal
temperature. A range of thermally-stable DNA polymerases are by exonuclease activity of the polymerase. Signal is produced at
currently in use, all with their specificities in respect of reaction each cycle of the PCR reaction. Sensitive instruments have been
fidelity, proofreading activity and thermal stability. Special atten- developed that allow the real-time detection of the signal
tion to the fidelity and consistency of amplification offered by such produced. When it passes a certain threshold level, the signal is
enzymes is required, as PCR error levels differ. PCR based on soil transformed into predicted target gene numbers on the basis of
nucleic acids has turned into a basic step in soil molecular analyses, a pre-established calibration line with standard target DNA. qPCR is
like the sequencing of inserts in so-called clone libraries and/or currently widely applied to soil-extracted DNA, allowing the
molecular fingerprinting techniques such as DGGE or T-RFLP. quantification of numbers of target genes such as 16S rRNA genes
A recent study illustrating this, revealed, on the basis of 16S rRNA (to quantify soil bacteria) or of functional genes like amoA or nifH.
gene-based PCR applied to DNA from the mycosphere versus cor- Although successfully used in many soil studies (e.g., [30]), qPCR is
responding bulk soil, that selected bacterial (sphingomonad) plagued by the very same biases as PCR based on soil DNA extracts;
82 J.D. van Elsas, F.G.H. Boersma / European Journal of Soil Biology 47 (2011) 77e87

it provides an inherently biased picture of target gene abundance nucleotide sequences. This is achieved on polyacrylamide gels with
and obviously does not detect any gene of the same function with denaturing or temperature gradients, respectively for DGGE and
aberrant sequence. However, qPCR may be well employed at the TGGE. The techniques were originally developed for mutation
microhabitat/mycosphere level to assess to what extent local detection [56], but they have been extensively used for soil
conditions affect gene and gene expression levels. Thus, it may be microbial community analyses since the 90-ies [5,48]. PCR-DGGE
possible to more precisely map microbial diversity and function to has been optimized for use with soil DNA in the last decade and
soil/mycosphere space. now constitutes a routine and reliable method to produce rapid
depictions of (dominant) soil microbial communities. Depending
3.4. Commonly used molecular analytical approaches on the primers used, PCR-DGGE can depict the microbial diversity
and community make-up at the level of the 16S rRNA gene
3.4.1. Molecular fingerprinting techniques (phylogenetically-based fingerprinting) or any other marker gene
Following PCR of either the 16S rRNA gene or any phylogenetic (such as rpoB, gyrA or recA), or, alternatively, at the level of a func-
or functional gene of choice, analysis of the amplified target tional gene (such as amoA). Furthermore, the suitability with
sequences is needed to yield the data on the microbial communities respect to the quick comparison of large numbers of samples from
that are sought. These further analysis can proceed via e.g., different treatments has made the technique common property
restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis (PCR-RFLP), across a range of laboratories. The ability to excise, reamplify and
which yields relatively simple community fingerprints that can be sequence particular bands in the patterns even allows for the
used for comparative purposes. Direct hybridization of the ampli- identification of the microbial types or genes that underly these
cons to a specific probe using a dot blot or Southern blot approach is bands, although the sizes of the underlying amplicons may limit the
another option, yielding information about the presence of regions information that is obtained [14,21]. In spite of its current routine
of homology to the probe. Alternatively, cloning into a library fol- use and wide acceptance, PCR-DGGE still faces problems which
lowed by sequencing of selected library clones can be used, may hamper the analyses. For one, different sequences may display
providing information about the diversity and nature of the similar migratory behavior in the gel, thus giving rise to coinciding
sequences that are targeted. Over the last decade, PCR-based bands [57]. Secondly, the presence of multiple melting domains
molecular fingerprinting techniques have superseeded most other within the same molecule may cause bands to appear fuzzy on gel
post-PCR analytical methods that allow insight into soil microbial [58]. Thirdly, and specifically important for the 16S rRNA based
diversity and community make-up. The advantage of these approaches, some organisms contain several (up to 15) ribosomal
methods is that they allow a direct comparative overview of the operons, between which microheterogeneity may exist. If this
composition and diversity of the (dominant) soil microbiota tar- microheterogeneity yields differences in melting, then multiple
geted. A range of molecular fingerprinting methods based on PCR- bands arise on gel which are provenient from the same organism.
generated amplicons, such as denaturing gradient gel electropho- Finally, the formation of heteroduplexes may cause an over-
resis (DGGE) [48], temperature gradient gel electrophoresis (TGGE) estimation of the number of bands present, although this
[40,48], terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism phenomenon is often detectable on gel [59]. Due to these issues as
(T-RFLP) [49], single-strand conformational polymorphism (SSCP) well as the still qualitative nature of the PCR which is used as the
[50], ribosomal internal spacer analysis (RISA) [51] and length basis for the generation of molecules of different sequence, quan-
heterogeneity-PCR (LH-PCR) [52] have emerged. All of these tification of the bands as a tool to predict the absolute abundance of
methods enable the direct fingerprinting of soil microbial particular bacterial types in the community is often of questionable
communities at different levels of resolution, and among them, value. Hereunder, we examine to what extent phylogenetically-
DGGE of PCR amplicons has been most widely accepted. In the light based bacterial PCR-DGGE allows us to make inferences about soil
of the PCR biases as discussed above, the methods are clearly microbial community make-up.
limited to the dominant members (the so-called top-1000) of the
microbial community that is targeted. Hence, without applying any 3.4.3. Bacterial phylogenetic DGGE
kind of deliberate “pre-bias”, the method will not access organisms The 16S rRNA gene is nowadays routinely used in PCR-DGGE as
of the rare biosphere of soil. Another observation, and a matter of well as TGGE as the proxy for bacterial phylogenetic relatedness. In
caution, is that all the soil DNA-based applications will detect both fact, the first DGGE and TGGE analyses that were ever performed, in
viable and non-viable (or even dead) populations of cells. These the 90-ies, were based on the use of bacterial 16S rRNA genes.
two groups are hardly distinguishable without performing addi- Application of the method to diverse soil communities has yielded
tional assessments, such as analyzing cell viability in a direct viable important scientific insights that were impossible to achieve before
count assay [53]. the onset of the approach. Thus, on the basis of this method, Dui-
To assist or finetune the direct nucleic acid based molecular neveld et al. [60] could clearly dissect the bacterial communities in
fingerprinting methods, incorporation of label (e.g., 13C in substrate the rhizosphere of Chrysanthemum, pinpointing Variovorax spp.,
that can be consumed) prior to soil sampling (e.g., bromodeox- next to Acetobacter spp., as key rhizosphere inhabitants. Concerning
yuridine [BrdU] or stable isotope prelabelling of cells, see below) the area of the assessment of the impact of genetically-modified
provides an emerging very promising complementary approach. (GM) plants, Gyamfi et al. [61] showed, on the basis of the method,
The methods allows the pinpointing, in a microbial community, of ephemeral minor changes in the bacterial diversity between GM
those organisms that are actively involved in a particular ecosystem and non-GM canola. In contrast, Angelo-Picard et al. [62] did not
task, e.g. the incorporation of BrdU under certain conditions [54] or find any difference in the eubacterial communities between GM
the transformation of the compound carrying the label [55]. Given and non-GM tobacco. Given the successes with such analyses, it
the fact that DGGE is the most frequently used technique in many seems likely that 16S rRNA-based PCR-DGGE will remain one
soil research laboratories, this method will be described in more method of choice in future studies on the impact of GM plants on
depth in the following section. the soil microbiota. However, as indicated before, it has inherent
limitations with respect to its resolving power, as typically only up
3.4.2. PCR-DGGE to 100 bands can be distinguished in a gel lane. Only the most
In PCR-based DGGE, as well as TGGE, similar-sized amplicons abundant members of a microbial community are thus detectable,
generated by PCR are separated on the basis of differences in their with a threshold of roughly 0.1% of the total (the “top-1000”).
J.D. van Elsas, F.G.H. Boersma / European Journal of Soil Biology 47 (2011) 77e87 83

Therefore, the approach does not detect microorganisms of the rare (with preselected primers that target a selected phylogenetic
biosphere in soil and also will not easily detect subtle changes in proxy like the 16S rRNA gene, or a functional gene) are ligated into
a microbial community. This lack of resolving power has partially a suitable vector plasmid. Subsequently, the resulting constructs
been solved by targeting specific groups within the community, as are introduced into Escherichia coli by transformation. After
outlined in the foregoing. Another limitation of phylogenetically- growth of single colonies that received vectors with insert, cloned
based PCR-DGGE profiling is that it does not a priori allow us to amplicons can be isolated by plasmid extraction, sequenced and
assess soil functioning. On the other hand, in particular cases such the sequences analyzed by comparison to databases. In this
as the bacterial ammonia oxidizers, the phylogenetic profiles were analysis, chimeras are routinely discarded, as discussed before. The
found to correlate well with functional diversity. Hence, group- sensitivity of clone library analyses, with respect to understanding
specific PCR-DGGE analyses proved to be very useful to infer the community diversity and phylogenetic make-up, is higher
potential function and functional redundancy. Such considerations than that of the aforementioned fingerprinting techniques. This is
are important as they provide ways to infer whether additional mainly so because the sequences are analyzed separately, and
methods that address functioning are necessary. These methods hence single sequences from abundant or less abundant species
may range from the detection and quantification of messenger RNA (given a large enough sample size) are well detectable. Addition-
and/or of functional genes to the assessment of the rate of ally, a major advantage of 16S rRNA gene based clone libraries is
functioning. the ability to directly obtain and analyze novel sequences, which
increases our knowledge of soil microbial community make-up.
3.4.4. Functional gene-based DGGE to assess functional diversity Rarefaction analysis has shown that, in order to achieve satisfac-
As the functional redundancy among the bacteria in soil is often tory coverage of the extant bacterial diversity in soil ecosystems,
high, community shifts observed via PCR-DGGE gels based on 16S an unrealistically high number of sequences is often required
rRNA genes do not a priori provide information on soil functioning, (roughly over 1500 or 2000 [66]). However, practical consider-
quality and health. In this respect, reduced soil microbial diversity ations (as reflected in the question “what degree of novelty is
might not necessarily correlate with poor soil functioning. Given presented with clone library analysis even if coverage is still
the limitations of phylogenetic assessments, in the last decade an low?”) have led the scientific community to also accept data
increasing focus has been placed on the analysis of protein- obtained with smaller-sized libraries. Moreover, the data con-
encoding genes involved in key ecosystem processes. On the one tained in these can be cross-compared between different soils or
hand, attention was given to functions in which the genes are treatments using advanced statistical tools such as LIBSHUFF [67]
harbored by only one or few bacterial species, i.e., which are mono- or UniFrac [68].
or oligophyletic. Disturbances influencing such groups, e.g., bacte- Clone library analysis is a somewhat laborious method, which,
rial ammonia oxidizers, supposedly have a larger influence on soil with current ultra-high-throughput sequence facilities, allows for
functioning than those affecting highly-redundant groups [63]. On an in-depth analysis of microorganisms or functional genes present
the other hand, functional genes occurring in a wide range of in a soil microbial community. However, the current high-
bacteria, such as in denitrification, were addressed. Gene databases throughput facilities also facilitate the direct generation of
have expanded enormously over the last decade, making robust sequence diversity data on the basis of soil DNA, thus bypassing the
and specific primer design for the detection of a range of functional cloning step (see section High throughput sequencing). Clone
genes feasible (see further). However, the web-based information libraries have high resolution but e as large samples are needed to
that can be found per functional gene still does not come close to detect the less abundant (rare) bacterial types e do not allow for
the wealth of information on 16S rRNA gene sequences. Various a quick overview of the diversity per sample or the difference
target genes have been used as proxies to track changes in soil between samples, as is the case with fingerprinting techniques.
functional gene diversity, including the gene encoding ammonia Therefore, there is a need to combine the two methods. It is,
monooxygenase, amoA, those encoding methane monooxygenases however, important to recognize the cloning bias that is inherent to
pmoA and mmoX [30], nitrate reductase narG, nitrite reductases the technique, i.e., DNA fragments are ligated into a vector plasmid
nirK and nirS, and nifH encoding the dinitrogenase reductases of with possibly differential efficiencies. This may affect the inter-
nitrogen-fixing bacteria [45]. Interestingly, the nifH gene has pretation of the true microbial diversity in the system. Direct
recently been used to study the impact of GM (Bt) white spruce on pyrosequencing or microarray analysis of soil DNA bypasses this
soil nitrogen-fixing communities [64]. The authors did not find potential bias (see sections below).
a significant effect of the transgenic plant on the nitrogen-fixing
communities. As another example, the presence of the phlD gene 3.6. DNA microarrays (chips)
encoding the production of the antagonistic compound diacetyl Over the last decade, the analysis of the diversity and activity of
phloroglucinol (DAPG) by pseudomonads has been successfully the soil microbiota has been greatly spurred by the development
tracked in soil using PCR-DGGE [65]. of DNA microarrays and their use in hybridization assays of soil
Although the analysis of target genes encoding enzymes DNA. In this method, soil DNA is, often after pre (PCR-based)
involved in key or sensitive soil processes provides better insight in amplification, fluorescently labeled and brought into contact with
(potential) soil function than that of the 16S rRNA gene, the link a microarray. On the microarray, up to tens of thousands of
between soil microbial diversity and function is still far from oligonucleotide probes, either consisting of fragments of 16S rRNA
understood. One of the greatest challenges for the forthcoming genes (Phylochip; [69,70]) or of functional genes (Geochip; [71]),
years will be to understand how microbial diversity affects the are positioned in a dense array. Genes in the soil DNA that are
functioning of the soil system and to address the issue of stability of homologous to the probes present on the chip will bind e via
function in the face of stress imposed on the soil. hybridization e at the positions of their homologous counterparts.
After hybridization, the signals on the chip are digitally analyzed.
3.5. Clone libraries This way, information on the phylogenetic diversity and commu-
As mentioned in the foregoing, analyses of clone libraries nity make-up (Phylochip) as well as on functional potential
provides direct access to information (richness, evenness and (Geochip) of the soil is obtained in high throughput. In a high-
nature) on the targeted gene sequences present in the extant complexity sample such as soil, distinguishing potential sequence
microbiota. In clone library analyses, PCR-generated amplicons diversity and cross-hybridization may be problematic. To solve the
84 J.D. van Elsas, F.G.H. Boersma / European Journal of Soil Biology 47 (2011) 77e87

issue for the phylochip, a minimum of eleven or more short very suitable for massive parallel sequencing of metagenomes and
oligonucleotides have been designed, allowing to distinguish metatranscriptomes [75]. For instance, soon after its emergence,
perfect match (PM) from mismatch (MM) [70]. Cross-hybridization 454-based pyrosequencing was applied to soil DNA [66,76,77] and/
becomes a key issue in particular when highly abundant 16S rRNA or RNA [19]. This method consists of multiparellel sequencing by
gene fragments share sequence similarity to nontarget probes synthesis, in which the pyrophosphate that is released is detected
resulting in weak false positive signals. The perfect match (PM)- in an enzymatic cascade ending in luciferase and detection of the
mismatch (MM) pair approach substantially improves the fidelity emitted light. Pyrosequencing, as well as Illumina sequencing
of hybridization. The phyloarray approach was suitable to identify bypass three bottlenecks in classical sequencing, namely library
OTUs which contributed to the differences in the soils under preparation, template preparation and the actual capillary
different land use. DeSantis et al. [69] detected a higher degree of sequencing [73]. Its multiparallellity allows the production of
diversity by this approach than that observed by 16S rRNA gene hundreds of thousands to millions of 450-bp reads in just a single
based PCR followed by cloning and sequencing. Moreover, the run. The Solexa platform even offers an orders of magnitude higher
approach was useful to overcome the problem of dominance, i.e., throughput of reads, however at lower read lengths (currently
the overshadowing of members of the rare soil biosphere by the 35 bp on average).
dominant ones. The phyloarrays that are presently available can The sensitivities of the two NG sequencing platforms are mainly
thus complement the 16S rRNA gene based cloning and determined by the efficiency and unbiased nature of the
sequencing as well as community fingerprinting by PCR-DGGE or - sequencing, which directly uses soil DNA. Hence, the soil DNA
T-RFLP. In addition, geochips may contain over 24,000 probes extraction method strongly determines the representation and
covering more than 10,000 genes distributed among more than eventual bias of the data. The 454 platform, yielding longer reads, is
150 functional groups involved in nitrogen, carbon, sulphur and of direct use for the generation of, e.g., partial 16S rRNA based reads,
phosphorus cycling [71]. They have been employed for soil studies whereas the Solexa platform, due to its extreme throughput, may
[71] in which initial hybridizations showed to be rather insensi- serve the purpose of “gap-filling” in 454-generated sequence data.
tive. Hence, to increase sensitivity, preamplification (e.g., by rolling Limitations may arise by the human capability to analyze the
circle amplification) has been included. The geochip has been immense amount of data obtained and of databases to deal with
successfully applied to study N- and C-cycle genes in antarctic errors (noise) and to filter out the genes of interest [78].
soils [72], indicating that the functional gene complement differed In practical terms, evolutionarily-distant genes with similar
significantly across sampling locations and vegetation types. Given function from previously unknown sources may remain uncon-
the novelty of the functional gene array, quantitative PCR and sidered as databases may fail to identify such sequences. On the
enzyme assays were used, which substantiated the microarray other hand, given current analytical power, direct pyrosequencing
hybridization results [72]. of soil DNA allows to dissect a system from the top to the bottom,
Microarray hybridization has enormous potential, including the i.e., starting with the most abundant species going down into the
possibility to generate a so-called universal microarray describing rare biosphere [77,79]. A major advantage of pyrosequencing is
soil quality or health. However, it is critical here which probes will that, given its ultra-high throughput and lack of biases, many new
be elected to make part of the chip, and the relationship between sequences will be discovered, thereby giving novel insight into soil
particular genes and soil health is not at all clear. Furthermore, microbial diversity [80]. There are, however, some drawbacks. The
positive detection will depend on the probes that are present on the reads that are produced are often relatively small (maximally
chip and thus on pre-existing knowledge about the underlying 450 bp), thus yielding only partial 16S rRNA sequence reads. The
organisms or genes. Hence, totally unknown organisms or genes method is more error-prone than previous (Sanger-based)
will not be detected by using chips that are based on database sequencing and thus special error (“noise”) detection programs are
sequences. Researchers have acknowledged this problem and have required [78]. Lastly, the overwhelming amount of sequence data
set out to prepare chips based directly on soil DNA, thus encom- obtained will require special bioinformatics software for easy
passing material from the whole sampled community (Vogel, pers. sorting (binning) and analysis. It will possibly make arbitrary
comm). This has potentially solved one problem, namely the lack of choices insuperable, hampering the analyses [80]. Furthermore, at
representation for the extant community, but it has opened another this point in time, analyses on the basis of pyrosequencing are a bit
box of problems, i.e., those related to the undefined nature of many limited by the high costs of the equipment and procedure, but this
of the new probes on the chip. situation is rapidly changing.
Probe development, hybridization quality and data evaluation In spite of financial and other limitations, the NG sequencing
are the crucial steps for an appropriate use of DNA microarrays to techniques discussed so far have already been extensively used in
study the soil microbiota. Bottlenecks in microarray work include the analyses of soil microbial diversity and community structure as
problems of robustness and the fact that they cannot generate well as gene expression (metatranscriptomics) across diverse soils
information on new sequence types. Thus, only the breadth of [19,66,76,77]. In these cases, mostly bulk soils have been analyzed.
functions/genes that are already known can be assessed [72]. In For instance, the soil microbial community structures were shown
spite of such remaining challenges, the all-at-once glance at to shift in relation to soil pH as the main driver, in particular when
(potential) soil functioning offered by DNA microarrays is direct pyrosequencing was used [66,76]. In addition, a range of
very attractive. The data obtained can be placed in the context of novel sequences was obtained on the basis of mRNA (metatran-
(local) soil/mycosphere conditions to obtain gene level e habitat scriptome analysis), although mRNA was never dominant in the
correlations. extracts [19]. It is foreseeable that, with improved sensitivity [81],
soil metatranscriptome-based analyses will actually superseed the
3.7. High throughput sequencing- pyrosequencing microarray-based analyses, as they (1) directly approach gene
and Solexa-based sequencing expression at the RNA level and (2) are independent of prior
Just a few years ago, several highly powerful novel sequencing assumptions about the types of genes present. Thus, in terms of the
techniques, denoted next-generation (NG) sequencing methods, approaches used, we are currently witnessing a rapid shift from the
were developed [73]. Prominent among them were the so-called already well-accepted molecular fingerprinting and microarray-
454-based/pyrosequencing [74] and Illumina/Solexa’s Genome based techniques to methods based on direct pyrosequencing of
Analyzer sequencing. These high-throughput technologies seemed environmental metagenomic DNA or RNA [19,66,76,77].
J.D. van Elsas, F.G.H. Boersma / European Journal of Soil Biology 47 (2011) 77e87 85

4. Molecular methods applied to soil microhabitats e the obtained, a selective effect of the mycospheres of several fungi on
mycosphere the microbial communities -associated with these was found,
indicating the possible existence, among soil bacteria, of universal
4.1. Use of molecular techniques to unravel bacterialefungal versus specific fungiphiles [82]. Parallels of these data might be
interactions in soil e the mycosphere drawn with the well-known rhizosphere effect, i.e., the clear
selective effect that plant roots exert on the microbial communities
Taking into account the aforementioned intricacies of the in the surrounding soil, and the specificity of the responses given by
mycosphere habitat, Warmink and van Elsas [16] recently proposed particular soil bacteria. In another mycosphere study [35], direct
that an excellent compartment representative of the mycosphere is analysis of Sphingomonadaceae communities in the mycosphere of
provided by the foot of fungal fruiting bodies (mushrooms), where two fungal types and the comparison of these with bulk soil
bundles, consisting of dense networks of hyphae, is present. These communities was a primary aim. Hence, it was important to fine-
bundles were hypothesized to concentrate the potential effect on tune and apply a sphingomonad-specific PCR amplification system
mycosphere-associated bacteria and thus to serve as a hot spot for coupled to clone library analysis and DGGE fingerprinting to
bacterial activity in soil. By severing off the mushroom foot part, analyze whether communities of the targeted sphingomonads
and shaking the loose soil from the foot, a shallow layer of soil were selected in the mycosphere. Moreover, it was thought to be
surrounding the mushroom foot was obtained (Fig. 1). The bacteria imminent to analyze to what extent different members of this
inhabiting this area in soil were assumed to provide the best access community become selected or deselected in the mycosphere. On
to the mycosphere microbiota. Using this sampling strategy, War- the basis of the respective soil and mycosphere DNAs, we thus
mink and co-workers [16,35,82] successfully isolated 2e5 mg of obtained an in-depth analysis of the respective sphingomonad
DNA per g of mycosphere soil, which, by a back-of-the-envelope communities and revealed strong mycosphere effects on these. The
calculation, may be considered as fairly representative for the data also revealed hitherto undetected bacterial groups. These
estimated microbial community size in this compartment. examples are not exhaustive and could be complemented with
Following the successful extraction of DNA from the mycosphere, examples from other labs. However, they illustrate that e as a result
the further processing and analytical steps required to describe the of the application of molecular tools e strong progress has been
local microbiota were found to be similar to those executed with achieved in our understanding of the bacterial communities at the
DNA from bulk soil (see section on Soil nucleic acid extraction microhabitat/mycosphere level. The ability to precisely sample and
above; Fig. 1). dissect samples of such soil microhabitats into the key components
On the basis of nucleic acids extracted from the mycosphere and needed for molecular analyses was a crucial and indispensable
corresponding bulk soil, both bacterial phylogenetic PCR-DGGE and conditio-sine-qua-non in these analyses. Moreover, further poly-
clone library analysis were then successfully performed [16,35,82]. phasic studies performed in the mycosphere in microcosms
These studies revealed a clear “mycosphere effect” exerted by the revealed the selective effect of glycerol released by fungal hyphae in
varied fungi on the local bacterial communities. A major finding fungus (Lyophillum sp. strain Karsten) -associated V. paradoxus like
was that the apparent diversity of the bacterial community in the bacteria [17]. Also, this fungus was shown to de-acidify the acid soil
mycosphere generally decreased. In other words, the community used to pH values over 5.0, as a result of which the used V. para-
revealed reduced complexity. It was hypothesized that nutrient- doxus strain, as well as several other bacterial strains, had a more
rich spots at the mycosphere might locally have incited bacterial favourable niche [83]. In this case, the mycosphere apparently
growth leading to locally selective processes. The reduced constituted a hospitable microhabitat for the bacterial partner.
complexity might be favourable for the dissection of the system by A more in-depth insight into the interactive processes that take
the aforementioned high-throughput metagenomics- or meta- place in this microhabitat should now be achievable using nucleic
transcriptomics-based sequencing approaches. acid based metagenomics and metatranscriptomics analyses. The
Furthermore, particular bacterial types were also obtained in latter analysis would be especially relevant, as responses of the
culture, allowing to study their responses to fungal hyphae in the bacterial partners to soil fungi and vice versa in the microcosm
soil. Soil pH, next to the presence of glycerol, was shown to impact might be directly assessed from comparative analyses of the met-
the local populations of Variovorax paradoxus HB44 [17,83]. Thus, atranscriptomes obtained from systems with or without any one of
this polyphasic approach, consisting of direct molecular methods the partners.
and cultivation-based analyses, allowed an in-depth analysis of However, given the overall nature of these methods applied to
bacterial population dynamics in soil. The power of the finger- mixed soil microbial communities and the analytical power offered
printing and clone library based methods that were used in dis- by having microorganisms in culture, for such studies it is strongly
secting the bacterial communities in mycosphere microhabitats advocated to apply a polyphasic analytical approach to analyzing
was thus indicated [16,35,82]. soil and related systems, which should consist of:

5. Concluding remarks and outlook (1) analysis of soil microorganisms in a direct fashion on the basis
of their DNA or RNA, using molecular methods (see later),
In this review, we provide an overview of currently almost (2) detection of their activities, if possible, in situ (e.g., messenger
traditional molecular methods, such as PCR-based fingerprinting RNA-based),
and clone library analyses, to access the soil microbiota, as well as (3) isolation of organisms and interrogating their ecophysiological
recent advances in the development of novel methods (microarrays behavior in order to predict their in situ behaviour.
and high-throughput metagenomic sequencing) and their appli-
cation to soil samples. We posit that the large array of currently
available molecular methods will even gain in analytical power if
carefully applied to the proper soil microhabitats, such as the Acknowledgements
mycosphere, where focussed research questions are being posed. In
some examples of recent work in our laboratory, the application of We thank Rashid Nazir for his assistance with providing mate-
fingerprinting as well as cloning methods to the mycosphere of rial for this review. Three anonymous reviewers are acknowledged
selected soil fungi was examined [16,35,82]. From the data for their very helpful comments.
86 J.D. van Elsas, F.G.H. Boersma / European Journal of Soil Biology 47 (2011) 77e87

References [30] S. Kolb, C. Knief, S. Stubner, R. Conrad, Quantitative detection of methano-


trophs in soil by novel pmoA targeted real-time PCR assays, Appl. Environ.
Microbiol. 69 (2003) 2423e2429.
[1] J.T. Staley, A. Konopka, Measurement of in situ activities of non-photosynthetic
[31] W. Liesack, E. Stackebrandt, Unculturable microbes detected by molecular
microorganisms in aquatic and terrestrial habitats, Annu. Rev. Microbiol. 39
sequences and probes, Biodivers. Conserv. 1 (1992) 250e262.
(1985) 321e346.
[32] P. Hugenholtz, B.M. Goebel, N.R. Pace, Impact of culture-independent studies
[2] A. Ogram, G.S. Sayler, T. Barkay, The extraction and purification of microbial
on the emerging phylogenetic view of bacterial diversity, J. Bacteriol. 180
DNA from sediments, J. Microbiol. Methods 7 (1987) 57e66.
(1998) 4765e4774.
[3] J.T. Trevors, J.D. van Elsas, A review of selected methods in environmental
[33] P. Hugenholtz, G.W. Tyson, R.I. Webb, A.M. Wagner, L.L. Blackall, Investigation
microbial genetics, Can. J. Microbiol. 35 (1989) 895e902.
of candidate division TM7, a recently recognized major lineage of the domain
[4] A.D.L. Akkermans, J.D. van Elsas, F.J. de Bruijn, Molecular Microbial Ecology
bacteria with no known pure culture representatives, Appl. Environ. Micro-
Manual I. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, NL, 2000.
biol. 67 (2001) 411e419.
[5] G.A. Kowalchuk, F.J. de Bruijn, I.M. Head, A.D.L. Akkermans, J.D. van Elsas,
[34] B.C. Ferrari, S.J. Binnerup, M. Gillings, Microcolony cultivation on a soil
Molecular Microbial Ecology Manual II. Kluwer Academic Pub, Dordrecht, NL,
substrate Membrane system Selects for previously Uncultured soil bacteria,
2004.
Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 71 (2005) 8714e8720.
[6] G.S. Sayler, M.S. Shields, E.T. Tedford, A. Breen, S.W. Hooper, K.M. Sirotkin,
[35] F.G.H. Boersma, J.A. Warmink, F. Dini Andreote, J.D. van Elsas, Selection of
J.W. Davis, Application of DNAeDNA colony hybridization to the detection of
Sphingomonadaceae at the base of Laccaria proxima and Russula exalbicans
catabolic genotypes in environmental samples, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 49
fruiting bodies, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 75 (2009) 1979e1989.
(1985) 1295e1303.
[36] S.H. Hong, J. Bunge, C. Leslin, S. Jeon, S.S. Epstein, Polymerase chain reaction
[7] W.E. Holben, J.K. Jansson, B.K. Chelm, J.M. Tiedje, DNA probe method for the
primers miss half of rRNA microbial diversity, ISME J. 3 (2009) 1365e1373.
detection of specific microorganisms in the soil bacterial community, Appl.
[37] F.D. Andreote, R.T. Carneiro, J.F. Salles, J. Marcon, C.A. Labate, J.L. Azevedo,
Environ. Microbiol. 54 (1988) 703e711.
W.L. Araujo, Culture-independent assessment of rhizobiales-related alphap-
[8] O. Inceoglu, E.F. Hoogwout, P.P. Hill, J.D. van Elsas, Effect of DNA extraction
roteobacteria and the diversity of Methylobacterium in the rhizosphere and
method on the apparent microbial diversity of soil, Appl. Environ. Microbiol.
rhizoplane of transgenic eucalyptus, Microb. Ecol. 57 (2009) 82e93.
76 (2010) 3378e3382.
[38] R. Costa, N.C.M. Gomes, R.S. Peixoto, N. Rumjanek, G. Berg, L.C.S. Mendonca-
[9] K. Smalla, N. Cresswell, L. Mendonca-Hagler, A. Wolters, J.D. van Elsas, Rapid
Hagler, K. Smalla, Diversity and antagonistic potential of Pseudomonas spp.
DNA extraction protocol from soil for polymerase chain reaction assisted
associated to the rhizosphere of maize grown in a subtropical organic farm,
amplification, J. Appl. Bacteriol. 74 (1993) 70e75.
Soil Biol. Biochem. 38 (2006) 2434e2447.
[10] L.S. van Overbeek, J.D. van Elsas, Effects of plant genotype and growth stage on
[39] P. Garbeva, J.A. van Veen, J.D. van Elsas, Microbial diversity in soil: selection of
the structure of bacterial communities associated with potato (Solanum
microbial populations by plant and soil type and implications for disease
tuberosum L.), FEMS Microbiol. Ecol. 64 (2008) 283e296.
suppressiveness, Annu. Rev. Phytopathol. 42 (2004) 243e270.
[11] R. Nazir, J.A. Warmink, H. Boersma, J.D. van Elsas, Mechanisms that promote
[40] H. Heuer, K. Smalla, Application of denaturing gradient gel electrophoreses
bacterial fitness in fungal-affected soil microhabitats, FEMS Microbiol. Ecol. 71
(DGGE) and temperature gradient gel electrophoreses (TGGE) for studying soil
(2010) 169e185.
microbial communities. in: J.D. Van Elsas, E.M.H. Wellington, J.T. Trevors
[12] W. de Boer, L.B. Folman, R.C. Summerbell, L. Boddy, Living in a fungal world:
(Eds.), Modern Soil Microbiol I. Marcel Dekker, New York, 1997, pp. 353e373.
impact of fungi on soil bacterial niche development, FEMS Microbiol. Rev. 29
[41] N.M. Leys, A. Ryngaert, L. Bastiaens, W. Verstraete, E.M. Top, D. Springael,
(2005) 795e811.
Occurrence and phylogenetic diversity of Sphingomonas strains in soils
[13] R.D. Finlay, The fungi in soil. in: J.D. Van Elsas, J.K. Jansson, J.T. Trevors (Eds.),
contaminated with polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, Appl. Environ. Micro-
Modern Soil Microbiology II. CRC Press, London, 2007, pp. 107e146.
biol. 70 (2004) 1944e1955.
[14] M. Filion, M. St Arnaud, J.A. Fortin, Direct interaction between the arbuscular
[42] R.J. Case, Y. Boucher, I. Dahll, C. Holmstrom, W.F. Doolittle, S. Kjelleberg, Use of
mycorrhizal fungus Glomus intraradices and different rhizosphere microor-
16S rRNA and rpoB genes as molecular markers for microbial ecology studies,
ganisms, New Phytol. 141 (1999) 525e533.
Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 73 (2007) 278e288.
[15] P. Frey-Klett, J. Garbaye, M. Tarkka, The mycorrhiza helper bacteria revisited,
[43] M. Waleron, K. Waleron, K. Geider, E. Lojkowska, Application of RFLP analysis
New Phytol. 176 (2007) 22e36.
of recA, gyrA and rpoS gene fragments for rapid differentiation of Erwinia
[16] J.A. Warmink, J.D. van Elsas, Selection of bacterial populations in the myco-
amylovora from Erwinia strains isolated in Korea and Japan, Eur. J. Plant
sphere of Laccaria proxima: is type III secretion involved? ISME J. 2 (2008)
Pathol. 121 (2008) 161e172.
887e900.
[44] M. Tacao, A. Moura, A. Alves, I. Henriques, M.J. Saavedra, A. Correia, Evaluation
[17] F.G.H. Boersma, R. Otten, J.A. Warmink, R. Nazir, J.D. van Elsas, Selection of
of 16S rDNA-and gyrB-DGGE for typing members of the genus Aeromonas,
Variovorax paradoxus-like bacteria in the mycosphere and the role of fungal-
FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 246 (2005) 11e18.
released compounds, Soil Biol. Biochem. 42 (2010) 2137e2145.
[45] J.D. van Elsas, J.K. Jansson, J.T. Trevors, Modern Soil Microbiology II. CRC Press,
[18] V. Torsvik, J. Goksoyr, F.L. Daae, R. Sorheim, J. Michalsen, K. Salte, Use of DNA
New York, 2006.
analysis to determine the diversity of microbial communities, in: Beyond the
[46] R. Costa, N.C. Gomes, E. Krogerrecklenfort, K. Opelt, G. Berg, K. Smalla, Pseu-
Biomass. John Wiley and Sons, Chichester, United Kingdom, 1990, pp. 39e48.
domonas community structure and antagonistic potential in the rhizosphere:
[19] T. Urich, A. Lanzén, Ji Qi, D.H. Huson, C. Schleper, S.C. Schuster, Simultaneous
insights gained by combining phylogenetic and functional gene-based anal-
assessment of soil microbial community structure and function through
yses, Environ. Microbiol. 9 (2007) 2260e2273.
analysis of the meta-transcriptome, PLoS One 3 (2008) 1e13.
[47] P.M. Holland, R.D. Abramson, R. Watson, D.H. Gelfand, Detection of specific
[20] C. Carrigg, O. Rice, S. Kavanagh, G. Collins, V. O’Flaherty, DNA extraction
polymerase chain reaction product by utilizing the 50 -30 exonuclease activity
method affects microbial community profiles from soils and sediment, Appl.
of Thermus aquaticus DNA polymerase, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 88 (1991)
Microbiol. Biotechnol. 77 (2007) 955e964.
7276e7280.
[21] S. Ikeda, N. Ytow, H. Ezura, K. Minamisawa, T. Fujimura, Soil microbial
[48] G. Muyzer, K. Smalla, Application of denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis
community analysis in the environmental risk assessment of transgenic
(DGGE) and temperature gradient gel electrophoresis (TGGE) in microbial
plants, Plant Biotechnol. 23 (2006) 137e151.
ecology, Anton van Leeuwenhoek 73 (1998) 127e141.
[22] H. Bergmann, M. Pesaro, F. Widmer, J. Zeyer, A strategy for optimizing quality
[49] C.R. Kuske, L.O. Ticknor, M.E. Miller, J.M. Dunbar, J.A. Davis, S.M. Barns,
and quantity of DNA extracted from soil, J. Microbiol. Methods 45 (2001)
J. Belnap, Comparison of soil bacterial communities in rhizospheres of three
7e20.
plant species and the interspaces in an arid grassland, Appl. Environ. Micro-
[23] A. Gelsomino, A.C. Keijzer-Wolters, G. Cacco, J.D. van Elsas, Assessment of
biol. 68 (2002) 1854e1863.
bacterial community structure in soil by polymerase chain reaction and dena-
[50] F. Schwieger, C.C. Tebbe, A new approach to utilize PCR-single-strand-
turing gradient gel electrophoresis, J. Microbiol. Methods 38 (1999) 1e15.
conformation polymorphism for 16S rRNA gene-based microbial community
[24] Y.L. Tsai, B.H. Olson, Rapid method for separation of bacterial DNA from humic
analysis, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 64 (1998) 4870e4876.
substances in sediments for polymerase chain reaction, Appl. Environ.
[51] L. Ranjard, E. Brothier, S. Nazaret, Sequencing bands of ribosomal intergenic
Microbiol. 58 (1992) 2292e2295.
spacer analysis fingerprints for characterization and microscale distribution of
[25] K. Ritz, B.S. Griffiths, Potential application of a community hybridization
soil bacterium populations responding to mercury spiking, Appl. Environ.
technique for assessing changes in the population structure of soil microbial
Microbiol. 66 (2000) 5334e5339.
communities, Soil Biol. Biochem. 26 (1994) 963e971.
[52] N.J. Ritchie, M.E. Schutter, R.P. Dick, D.D. Myrold, Use of length heterogeneity
[26] G. Voordouw, J.K. Voordouw, R.R. Karkhoff-Schweizer, P.M. Fedorak,
PCR and fatty acid methyl ester profiles to characterize microbial communi-
D.W.S. Westlake, Reverse sample genome probing, a new technique for
ties in soil, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 66 (2000) 1668e1675.
identification of bacteria in environmental samples by DNA hybridization, and
[53] K. Kogure, U. Simidu, N. Taga, R.R. Colwell, Correlation of direct viable counts
its application to the identification of sulfate-reducing bacteria in oil field
with heterotrophic activity for marine bacteria, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 53
samples, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 57 (1991) 3070e3078.
(1987) 2332e2337.
[27] J.D. van Elsas, C. Waalwijk, Methods for the detection of specific bacteria and
[54] V. Artursson, R.D. Finlay, J.K. Jansson, Combined bromodeoxyuridine
their genes in soil, Agric. Ecosys. Environ. 34 (1991) 97e105.
immunocapture and terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism
[28] H.A. Erlich, PCR Technology: Principles and Applications for DNA Amplifica-
analysis highlights differences in the active soil bacterial metagenome due to
tion. Stockton Press, New York, 1989.
Glomus mosseae inoculation or plant species, Environ. Microbiol. 7 (2005)
[29] M.A. Innis, D.H. Gelfand, J.J. Sninsky, T.J. White, PCR Protocols: A Guide to
1952e1966.
Methods and Applications. Academic Press, San Diego, 1990.
J.D. van Elsas, F.G.H. Boersma / European Journal of Soil Biology 47 (2011) 77e87 87

[55] S. Radajewski, G. Webster, D.S. Reay, S.A. Morris, P. Ineson, D.B. Nedwell, [70] E.L. Brodie, T.Z. DeSantis, J.P. Moberg Parker, I.X. Zubietta, Y.M. Piceno,
J.I. Prosser, J.C. Murrell, Identification of active methylotroph populations in an G.L. Andersen, Urban aerosols harbor diverse and dynamic bacterial pop-
acidic forest soil by stable-isotope probing, Microbiology 148 (2002) ulations, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 104 (2007) 299e304.
2331e2342. [71] Z. He, T.J. Gentry, C.W. Schadt, L. Wu, J. Liebich, S.C. Chong, Z. Huang, W. Wu,
[56] S.G. Fischer, L.S. Lerman, DNA fragments differing by single base-pair substi- B. Gu, P. Jardine, C. Criddle, J. Zhou, GeoChip: a comprehensive microarray for
tutions are separated in denaturing gradient gels: correspondence with investigating biogeochemical, ecological and environmental processes, ISME J.
melting theory, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 80 (1983) 1579e1583. 1 (2007) 67e77.
[57] H. Sekiguchi, N. Tomioka, T. Nakahara, H. Uchiyama, A single band does not [72] E. Yergeau, S. Kang, Z. He, J. Zhou, G. Kowalchuk, Functional microarray
always represent single bacterial strains in denaturing gradient gel electro- analysis of nitrogen and carbon cycling genes across an Antarctic latitudinal
phoresis analysis, Biotechnol. Lett. 23 (2001) 1205e1208. transect, ISME J. 1 (2007) 163e179.
[58] V. Kisand, J. Wikner, Limited resolution of 16S rDNA DGGE caused by melting [73] J.M. Rothberg, J.H. Leamon, The development and impact of 454 sequencing,
properties and closely related DNA sequences, J. Microbiol. Methods 54 (2003) Nat. Biotechnol. 26 (2008) 1117e1124.
183e191. [74] M. Margulies, M. Egholm, W.E. Altman, S. Attiya, J.S. Bader, L.A. Bemben,
[59] A.G.C.L. Speksnijder, G.A. Kowalchuk, S. de Jong, E. Kline, J.R. Stephen, J. Berka, M.S. Braverman, Y.J. Chen, Z. Chen, S.B. Dewell, L. Du, J.M. Fierro,
H.J. Laanbroek, Microvariation artifacts introduced by PCR and cloning of X.V. Gomes, B.C. Godwin, W. He, S. Helgesen, C.H. Ho, G.P. Irzyk, S.C. Jando,
closely related 16S rRNA gene sequences, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 67 (2001) M.L. Alenquer, T.P. Jarvie, K.B. Jirage, J.B. Kim, J.R. Knight, J.R. Lanza,
469e472. J.H. Leamon, S.M. Lefkowitz, M. Lei, J. Li, K.L. Lohman, H. Lu, V.B. Makhijani,
[60] B.M. Duineveld, G.A. Kowalchuk, A. Keijzer, J.D. van Elsas, J.A. van Veen, K.E. McDade, M.P. McKenna, E.W. Myers, E. Nickerson, J.R. Nobile, R. Plant,
Analysis of bacterial communities in the rhizosphere of Chrysanthemum via B.P. Puc, M.T. Ronan, G.T. Roth, G.J. Sarkis, J.F. Simons, J.W. Simpson,
denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis of PCR-Amplified 16S rRNA as well as M. Srinivasan, K.R. Tartaro, A. Tomasz, K.A. Vogt, G.A. Volkmer, S.H. Wang,
DNA fragments coding for 16S rRNA, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 67 (2001) Y. Wang, M.P. Weiner, P. Yu, R.F. Begley, J.M. Rothberg, Genome sequencing in
172e178. microfabricated high-density picolitre reactors, Nature 437 (2005) 376e380.
[61] S. Gyamfi, U. Pfeifer, M. Stierschneider, A. Sessitsch, Effects of transgenic [75] P.K. Wall, J. Leebens-Mack, A.S. Chanderbali, A. Barakat, E. Wolcott, H. Liang,
glufosinate-tolerant oilseed rape (Brassica napus) and the associated herbicide L. Landherr, L.P. Tomsho, Y. Hu, J.E. Carlson, H. Ma, S.C. Schuster, D.E. Soltis,
application on eubacterial and Pseudomonas communities in the rhizosphere, P.S. Soltis, N. Altman, C.W. dePamphilis, Comparison of next generation
FEMS Microbiol. Ecol. 41 (2002) 181e190. sequencing technologies for transcriptome characterization, BMC Genomics
[62] C. d’Angelo-Picard, D. Faure, A. Carlier, S. Uroz, A. Raffoux, R. Fray, Y. Dessaux, 10 (347) (2009) 1e19.
Bacterial populations in the rhizosphere of tobacco plants producing the [76] C.L. Lauber, M. Hamady, R. Knight, N. Fierer, Soil pH as a predictor of soil
quorum-sensing signals hexanoyl-homoserine lactone and 3-oxo-hexanoyl- bacterial community structure at the continental scale: a pyrosequenc-
homoserine lactone, FEMS Microbiol. Ecol. 51 (2004) 19e29. ing-based assessment, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. (2009). doi:10.1128/
[63] G.A. Kowalchuk, M. Bruinsma, J.A. van Veen, Assessing responses of soil AEM.00335-09.
microorganisms to GM plants, Trends Ecol. Evol. 18 (2003) 403e410. [77] L.F.W. Roesch, R.R. Fulthorpe, A. Riva, G. Casella, A.K.M. Hadwin, A.D. Kent,
[64] J. Lamarche, R.C. Hamelin, No evidence of an impact on the rhizosphere S.H. Daroub, F.A.O. Camargo, W.G. Farmerie, E.W. Triplett, Pyrosequencing
diazotroph community by the expression of Bacillus thuringiensis Cry1Ab enumerates and contrasts soil microbial diversity, ISME J. 1 (2007) 283e290.
toxin by Bt White Spruce, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 73 (2007) 6577e [78] C. Quince, A. Lanzon, T.P. Curtis, R.J. Davenport, N. Hall, I.M. Head, et al.,
6583. Accurate determination of microbial diversity from 454 pyrosequencing data,
[65] M. Frapolli, Y. Moenne-Loccoz, J. Meyer, G. Defago, A new DGGE protocol Nat. Meth. 6 (2009) 639e641.
targeting 2, 4-diacetylphloroglucinol biosynthetic gene phlD from phyloge- [79] Z. Liu, C. Lozupone, M. Hamady, F.D. Bushman, R. Knight, Short pyrose-
netically contrasted biocontrol pseudomonads for assessment of disease- quencing reads suffice for accurate microbial community analysis, Nucleic
suppressive soils, FEMS Microbiol. Ecol. 64 (2008) 468e481. Acids Res. 1 (2007) 1e10.
[66] C.L. Lauber, M.S. Strickland, M.A. Bradford, N. Fierer, The influence of soil [80] M.S. Elshahed, N.H. Youssef, A.M. Spain, C. Sheik, F.Z. Najar, L.O. Sukharnikov,
properties on the structure of bacterial and fungal communities across land- et al., Novelty and uniqueness patterns of rare members of the soil biosphere,
use types, Soil Biol. Biochem. 40 (2008) 2407e2415. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 74 (2008) 5422e5428.
[67] D.R. Singleton, M.A. Furlong, S.L. Rathbun, W.B. Whitman, Quantitative [81] J. Wu, W. Gao, W. Zhang, D.R. Meldrum, Optimization of whole-transcriptome
comparisons of 16S rRNA gene sequence libraries from environmental amplification from low cell density deep-sea micrbial samples for metatran-
samples, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. (2001) 4374e4376. scriptome analysis. J. Microbiol. Methods, in press, on-line available.
[68] C. Lozupone, R. Knight, UniFrac: a new phylogenetic method for [82] J.A. Warmink, R. Nazir, J.D. van Elsas, Universal and species-specific bacterial
comparing microbial communities, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 71 (2005) ‘fungiphiles’ in the mycospheres of different basidiomycetous fungi, Environ.
8228e8235. Microbiol. 11 (2009) 300e312.
[69] T.Z. DeSantis, E.L. Brodie, J.P. Moberg, I.X. Zubieta, Y.M. Piceno, G.L. Andersen, [83] R. Nazir, J.A. Warmink, F.G.H. Boersma, J.D. van Elsas, Lyophillum sp. strain
High-density universal 16S rRNA microarray analysis reveals broader diver- Karsten alleviates pH pressure in acid soil and enhances the survival of Var-
sity than typical clone library when sampling the environment, Microb. Ecol. iovorax paradoxus HB44 and other bacteria in the mycosphere, Soil Biol.
53 (2007) 371e383. Biochem. 42 (2010) 2146e2152.

You might also like