Evidence from GC-TRFLP that bacterial communities in soil are lognormally distributed.

The Species Abundance Distribution (SAD) is a fundamental property of ecological communities and the form and formation of SADs have been examined for a wide range of communities including those of microorganisms. Progress in understanding microbial SADs, however, has been limited by the remarkable...

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Main Authors: James R Doroghazi, Daniel H Buckley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-08-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2483420?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-a684a8fb2edf4561b8b01e91610353ab2020-11-25T00:02:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032008-08-0138e291010.1371/journal.pone.0002910Evidence from GC-TRFLP that bacterial communities in soil are lognormally distributed.James R DoroghaziDaniel H BuckleyThe Species Abundance Distribution (SAD) is a fundamental property of ecological communities and the form and formation of SADs have been examined for a wide range of communities including those of microorganisms. Progress in understanding microbial SADs, however, has been limited by the remarkable diversity and vast size of microbial communities. As a result, few microbial systems have been sampled with sufficient depth to generate reliable estimates of the community SAD. We have used a novel approach to characterize the SAD of bacterial communities by coupling genomic DNA fractionation with analysis of terminal restriction fragment length polymorphisms (GC-TRFLP). Examination of a soil microbial community through GC-TRFLP revealed 731 bacterial operational taxonomic units (OTUs) that followed a lognormal distribution. To recover the same 731 OTUs through analysis of DNA sequence data is estimated to require analysis of 86,264 16S rRNA sequences. The approach is examined and validated through construction and analysis of simulated microbial communities in silico. Additional simulations performed to assess the potential effects of PCR bias show that biased amplification can cause a community whose distribution follows a power-law function to appear lognormally distributed. We also show that TRFLP analysis, in contrast to GC-TRFLP, is not able to effectively distinguish between competing SAD models. Our analysis supports use of the lognormal as the null distribution for studying the SAD of bacterial communities as for plant and animal communities.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2483420?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James R Doroghazi
Daniel H Buckley
spellingShingle James R Doroghazi
Daniel H Buckley
Evidence from GC-TRFLP that bacterial communities in soil are lognormally distributed.
PLoS ONE
author_facet James R Doroghazi
Daniel H Buckley
author_sort James R Doroghazi
title Evidence from GC-TRFLP that bacterial communities in soil are lognormally distributed.
title_short Evidence from GC-TRFLP that bacterial communities in soil are lognormally distributed.
title_full Evidence from GC-TRFLP that bacterial communities in soil are lognormally distributed.
title_fullStr Evidence from GC-TRFLP that bacterial communities in soil are lognormally distributed.
title_full_unstemmed Evidence from GC-TRFLP that bacterial communities in soil are lognormally distributed.
title_sort evidence from gc-trflp that bacterial communities in soil are lognormally distributed.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2008-08-01
description The Species Abundance Distribution (SAD) is a fundamental property of ecological communities and the form and formation of SADs have been examined for a wide range of communities including those of microorganisms. Progress in understanding microbial SADs, however, has been limited by the remarkable diversity and vast size of microbial communities. As a result, few microbial systems have been sampled with sufficient depth to generate reliable estimates of the community SAD. We have used a novel approach to characterize the SAD of bacterial communities by coupling genomic DNA fractionation with analysis of terminal restriction fragment length polymorphisms (GC-TRFLP). Examination of a soil microbial community through GC-TRFLP revealed 731 bacterial operational taxonomic units (OTUs) that followed a lognormal distribution. To recover the same 731 OTUs through analysis of DNA sequence data is estimated to require analysis of 86,264 16S rRNA sequences. The approach is examined and validated through construction and analysis of simulated microbial communities in silico. Additional simulations performed to assess the potential effects of PCR bias show that biased amplification can cause a community whose distribution follows a power-law function to appear lognormally distributed. We also show that TRFLP analysis, in contrast to GC-TRFLP, is not able to effectively distinguish between competing SAD models. Our analysis supports use of the lognormal as the null distribution for studying the SAD of bacterial communities as for plant and animal communities.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2483420?pdf=render
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