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American Society for Microbiology, Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 2(72), p. 1019-1026, 2006

DOI: 10.1128/aem.72.2.1019-1026.2006

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Nitrous Oxide Reductase Genes (nosZ) of Denitrifying Microbial Populations in Soil and the Earthworm Gut Are Phylogenetically Similar†

Journal article published in 2006 by Marcus A. Horn ORCID, Harold L. Drake, Andreas Schramm ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

ABSTRACT Earthworms emit nitrous oxide (N 2 O) and dinitrogen (N 2 ). It has been hypothesized that the in situ conditions of the earthworm gut activates ingested soil denitrifiers during gut passage and leads to these in vivo emissions (M. A. Horn, A. Schramm, and H. L. Drake, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 69: 1662-1669, 2003). This hypothesis implies that the denitrifiers in the earthworm gut are not endemic to the gut but rather are regular members of the soil denitrifier population. To test this hypothesis, the denitrifier populations of gut and soil from three different sites were comparatively assessed by sequence analysis of nosZ , the gene for the terminal enzyme in denitrification, N 2 O reductase. A total of 182 and 180 nosZ sequences were retrieved from gut and soil, respectively; coverage of gene libraries was 79 to 100%. Many of the nosZ sequences were heretofore unknown, clustered with known soil-derived sequences, or were related to N 2 O reductases of the genera Bradyrhizobium , Brucella , Dechloromonas , Flavobacterium , Pseudomonas , Ralstonia , and Sinorhizobium . Although the numbers of estimators for genotype richness of sequence data from the gut were higher than those of soil, only one gut-derived nosZ sequence did not group phylogenetically with any of the soil-derived nosZ sequences. Thus, the phylogenies of nosZ from gut and soil were not dissimilar, indicating that gut denitrifiers are soil derived.