Diversity and abundance of nitrate reductase genes (narG and napA), nitrite reductase genes (nirS and nrfA), and their transcripts in estuarine sediments
journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-29, 20:21 authored by C. J. Smith, D. B. Nedwell, L. F. Dong, Mark Osborn<p>Estuarine systems are the major conduits for the transfer of nitrate from agricultural and other terrestrial-anthropogenic sources into marine ecosystems. Within estuarine sediments some microbially driven processes (denitrification and anammox) result in the net removal of nitrogen from the environment, while others (dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium) do not. In this study, molecular approaches have been used to investigate the diversity, abundance, and activity of the nitrate-reducing communities in sediments from the hypernutrified Colne estuary, United Kingdom, via analysis of nitrate and nitrite reductase genes and transcripts. Sequence analysis of cloned PCR-amplified narG, napA, and nrfA gene sequences showed the indigenous nitrate-reducing communities to be both phylogenetically diverse and also divergent from previously characterized nitrate reduction sequences in soils and offshore marine sediments and from cultured nitrate reducers. In both the narG and nrfA libraries, the majority of clones (48 and 50, respectively) were related to corresponding sequences from delta-proteobacteria. A suite of quantitative PCR primers and TaqMan probes was then developed to quantify phylotype-specific nitrate (narG and napA) and nitrite reductase (nirS and nrfA) gene and transcript numbers in sediments from three sites along the estuarine nitrate gradient. In general, both nitrate and nitrite reductase gene copy numbers were found to decline significantly (P < 0.05) from the estuary head towards the estuary mouth. The development and application, for the first time, of quantitative reverse transcription-PCR assays to quantify mRNA sequences in sediments revealed that transcript numbers for three of the five phylotypes quantified were greatest at the estuary head. Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.</p>
History
School affiliated with
- Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Applied and Environmental MicrobiologyVolume
73Issue
11Pages/Article Number
3612-3622Publisher
American Society for MicrobiologyExternal DOI
ISSN
0099-2240eISSN
1098-5336Date Submitted
2013-04-22Date Accepted
2013-04-22Date of First Publication
2013-04-22Date of Final Publication
2013-04-22ePrints ID
8952Usage metrics
Categories
Keywords
abundanceagricultural speciesarticleBacteriaBacterialBacterial ProteinsBiodiversityCloningColne EstuaryDeltaproteobacteriadenitrificationDNAEnglandEssex EnglandEstuariesestuarine sedimentEstuarine sedimentsestuarine speciesEurasiaEuropegene expressiongene librarygene sequencegenetic transcriptiongenetic variabilityGeologic SedimentsGreat BritainMarine ecosystemsmarine environmentMessengermessenger RNAMolecularmolecular cloningmolecular dynamicsMolecular Sequence DataMolecular structurenapA genenarG genenirS genenitratenitrate reductasenitritenitrite reductaseNitrite reductase genesNitrite ReductasesnitrogenNitrogen compoundsnonhumannrfa genenucleotide sequencephylogeneticsPhylogenypolymerase chain reactionprimer DNAquantitative analysisreductionReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reactionreverse transcription polymerase chain reactionRNAsedimentSedimentssequence analysisspecies diversityTranscriptionUnited KingdomWater MicrobiologyWestern Europe
Licence
Exports
RefWorksRefWorks
BibTeXBibTeX
Ref. managerRef. manager
EndnoteEndnote
DataCiteDataCite
NLMNLM
DCDC


