Development of a genes quantification technique and assessment of the technique’s application potential for oil and gas reservoir exploration

Propane-oxidizing bacteria in surface soils are often used to indicate the position of oil and gas reservoirs. As a potential replacement for the laborious traditional culture-dependent counting method, we applied real-time fluorescent quantitative polymerase chain reaction detection as a quick and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zhuo Ning, Ze He, Sheng Zhang, Miying Yin, Yaci Liu, Cuiyun Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-09-01
Series:Energy Exploration & Exploitation
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/0144598717754100
id doaj-7423b8b69a7d412fa3a5f0fed0b13100
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7423b8b69a7d412fa3a5f0fed0b131002020-11-25T04:03:18ZengSAGE PublishingEnergy Exploration & Exploitation0144-59872048-40542018-09-013610.1177/0144598717754100Development of a genes quantification technique and assessment of the technique’s application potential for oil and gas reservoir explorationZhuo NingZe HeSheng ZhangMiying YinYaci LiuCuiyun ZhangPropane-oxidizing bacteria in surface soils are often used to indicate the position of oil and gas reservoirs. As a potential replacement for the laborious traditional culture-dependent counting method, we applied real-time fluorescent quantitative polymerase chain reaction detection as a quick and accurate technology for quantification of propane-oxidizing bacteria. The propane monooxygenase gene was set as the target and the assay is based on SYBR Green I dye. The detection range was from 9.75 × 10 8 to 9.75 × 10 1 gene copies/µl, with the lowest detected concentration of 9.75 copies/µl. All coefficient of variation values of the threshold cycle in the reproducibility test were better than 1%. The technique showed good sensitivity, specificity, and reproducibility. We also quantified the propane-oxidizing bacteria in soils from three vertical 250 cm profiles collected from an oil field, a gas field, and a nonoil gas field using the established technique. The results indicated that the presence of propane monooxygenase A genes in soils can indicate an oil or gas reservoir. Therefore, this technique can satisfy the requirements for microbial exploration of oil and gas.https://doi.org/10.1177/0144598717754100
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhuo Ning
Ze He
Sheng Zhang
Miying Yin
Yaci Liu
Cuiyun Zhang
spellingShingle Zhuo Ning
Ze He
Sheng Zhang
Miying Yin
Yaci Liu
Cuiyun Zhang
Development of a genes quantification technique and assessment of the technique’s application potential for oil and gas reservoir exploration
Energy Exploration & Exploitation
author_facet Zhuo Ning
Ze He
Sheng Zhang
Miying Yin
Yaci Liu
Cuiyun Zhang
author_sort Zhuo Ning
title Development of a genes quantification technique and assessment of the technique’s application potential for oil and gas reservoir exploration
title_short Development of a genes quantification technique and assessment of the technique’s application potential for oil and gas reservoir exploration
title_full Development of a genes quantification technique and assessment of the technique’s application potential for oil and gas reservoir exploration
title_fullStr Development of a genes quantification technique and assessment of the technique’s application potential for oil and gas reservoir exploration
title_full_unstemmed Development of a genes quantification technique and assessment of the technique’s application potential for oil and gas reservoir exploration
title_sort development of a genes quantification technique and assessment of the technique’s application potential for oil and gas reservoir exploration
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Energy Exploration & Exploitation
issn 0144-5987
2048-4054
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Propane-oxidizing bacteria in surface soils are often used to indicate the position of oil and gas reservoirs. As a potential replacement for the laborious traditional culture-dependent counting method, we applied real-time fluorescent quantitative polymerase chain reaction detection as a quick and accurate technology for quantification of propane-oxidizing bacteria. The propane monooxygenase gene was set as the target and the assay is based on SYBR Green I dye. The detection range was from 9.75 × 10 8 to 9.75 × 10 1 gene copies/µl, with the lowest detected concentration of 9.75 copies/µl. All coefficient of variation values of the threshold cycle in the reproducibility test were better than 1%. The technique showed good sensitivity, specificity, and reproducibility. We also quantified the propane-oxidizing bacteria in soils from three vertical 250 cm profiles collected from an oil field, a gas field, and a nonoil gas field using the established technique. The results indicated that the presence of propane monooxygenase A genes in soils can indicate an oil or gas reservoir. Therefore, this technique can satisfy the requirements for microbial exploration of oil and gas.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/0144598717754100
work_keys_str_mv AT zhuoning developmentofagenesquantificationtechniqueandassessmentofthetechniquesapplicationpotentialforoilandgasreservoirexploration
AT zehe developmentofagenesquantificationtechniqueandassessmentofthetechniquesapplicationpotentialforoilandgasreservoirexploration
AT shengzhang developmentofagenesquantificationtechniqueandassessmentofthetechniquesapplicationpotentialforoilandgasreservoirexploration
AT miyingyin developmentofagenesquantificationtechniqueandassessmentofthetechniquesapplicationpotentialforoilandgasreservoirexploration
AT yaciliu developmentofagenesquantificationtechniqueandassessmentofthetechniquesapplicationpotentialforoilandgasreservoirexploration
AT cuiyunzhang developmentofagenesquantificationtechniqueandassessmentofthetechniquesapplicationpotentialforoilandgasreservoirexploration
_version_ 1724440783045525504