Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"Denaturing Gradient Gel Electrophoresis (DGGE) can Rapidly Display the
Bacterial Diversity Contained in 16S rDNA Clone Libraries"
06-006
Two different strategies for molecular analysis of bacterial diversity, 16S
rDNA cloning and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), were combined
into a single protocol that took advantage of the best attributes of each: the
ability of cloning to package DNA sequence information and the ability of DGGE
to display a community profile. In this combined protocol, polymerase chain
reaction products from environmental DNA were cloned, and then DGGE was used to
screen the clone libraries. Both individual clones and pools of randomly
selected clones were analyzed by DGGE, and these migration patterns were
compared to the conventional DGGE profile produced directly from environmental
DNA. For two simple bacterial communities (biofilm from a humics-fed laboratory
reactor and planktonic bacteria filtered from an urban freshwater pond), pools
of 35–50 clones produced DGGE profiles that contained most of the bands visible
in the conventional DGGE profiles, indicating that the clone pools were adequate
for identifying the dominant genotypes. However, DGGE profiles of two different
pools of 50 clones from a lawn soil clone library were distinctly different from
each other and from the conventional DGGE profile, indicating that this small
number of clones poorly represented the bacterial diversity in soil. Individual
clones with the same apparent DGGE mobility as prominent bands in the humics
reactor community profiles were sequenced from the clone plasmid DNA rather than
from bands excised from the gel. Because a longer fragment was cloned (∼1500 bp)
than was actually analyzed in DGGE (∼350 bp), far more sequence information was
available using this approach that could have been recovered from an excised gel
band. This clone/DGGE protocol permitted rapid analysis of the microbial
diversity in the two moderately complex systems, but was limited in its ability
to represent the diversity in the soil microbial community. Nonetheless, clone/DGGE
is a promising strategy for fractionating diverse microbial communities into
manageable subsets consisting of small pools of clones.
Burr, M.D., S.J. Clark, C.R. Spear, and A.K. Camper, "Denaturing Gradient Gel
Electrophoresis (DGGE) can Rapidly Display the Bacterial Diversity Contained in
16S rDNA Clone Libraries," Microb. Ecol., in press (2006) Published Online 28
April 2006
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