Crossref journal-article
American Society for Microbiology
Applied and Environmental Microbiology (235)
Abstract

A culture-independent survey of the soil microbial diversity in a clover-grass pasture in southern Wisconsin was conducted by sequence analysis of a universal clone library of genes coding for small-subunit rRNA (rDNA). A rapid and efficient method for extraction of DNA from soils which resulted in highly purified DNA with minimal shearing was developed. Universal small-subunit-rRNA primers were used to amplify DNA extracted from the pasture soil. The PCR products were cloned into pGEM-T, and either hypervariable or conserved regions were sequenced. The relationships of 124 sequences to those of cultured organisms of known phylogeny were determined. Of the 124 clones sequenced, 98.4% were from the domain Bacteria. Two of the rDNA sequences were derived from eukaryotic organelles. Two of the 124 sequences were of nuclear origin, one being fungal and the other a plant sequence. No sequences of the domain Archaea were found. Within the domain, Bacteria, three kingdoms were highly represented: the Proteobacteria (16.1%), the Cytophaga-Flexibacter-Bacteroides group (21.8%), and the low G+C-content gram-positive group (21.8%). Some kingdoms, such as the Thermotogales, the green nonsulfur group, Fusobacteria, and the Spirochaetes, were absent. A large number of the sequences (39.4%) were distributed among several clades that are not among the major taxa described by Olsen et al. (G.J. Olsen, C.R. Woese, and R. Overbeek, J. Bacteriol., 176:1-6, 1994). From the alignments of the sequence data, distance matrices were calculated to display the enormous microbial diversity found in this soil in two ways, as phylogenetic trees and as multidimensional-scaling plots.

Bibliography

Borneman, J., Skroch, P. W., O’Sullivan, K. M., Palus, J. A., Rumjanek, N. G., Jansen, J. L., Nienhuis, J., & Triplett, E. W. (1996). Molecular microbial diversity of an agricultural soil in Wisconsin. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 62(6), 1935–1943.

Authors 8
  1. J Borneman (first)
  2. P W Skroch (additional)
  3. K M O'Sullivan (additional)
  4. J A Palus (additional)
  5. N G Rumjanek (additional)
  6. J L Jansen (additional)
  7. J Nienhuis (additional)
  8. E W Triplett (additional)
References 0 Referenced 414

None

Dates
Type When
Created 5 years, 8 months ago (Jan. 6, 2020, 1:17 p.m.)
Deposited 3 years, 6 months ago (Feb. 23, 2022, 12:33 p.m.)
Indexed 1 week, 6 days ago (Aug. 23, 2025, 9:16 p.m.)
Issued 29 years, 3 months ago (June 1, 1996)
Published 29 years, 3 months ago (June 1, 1996)
Published Print 29 years, 3 months ago (June 1, 1996)
Funders 0

None

@article{Borneman_1996, title={Molecular microbial diversity of an agricultural soil in Wisconsin}, volume={62}, ISSN={1098-5336}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/aem.62.6.1935-1943.1996}, DOI={10.1128/aem.62.6.1935-1943.1996}, number={6}, journal={Applied and Environmental Microbiology}, publisher={American Society for Microbiology}, author={Borneman, J and Skroch, P W and O’Sullivan, K M and Palus, J A and Rumjanek, N G and Jansen, J L and Nienhuis, J and Triplett, E W}, year={1996}, month=jun, pages={1935–1943} }