Affiliation:
1. Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Biological nitrogen fixation is a fundamental component of the nitrogen cycle and is the dominant natural process through which fixed nitrogen is made available to the biosphere. While the process of nitrogen fixation has been studied extensively with a limited set of cultivated isolates, examinations of
nifH
gene diversity in natural systems reveal the existence of a wide range of noncultivated diazotrophs. These noncultivated diazotrophs remain uncharacterized, as do their contributions to nitrogen fixation in natural systems. We have employed a novel
15
N
2
-DNA stable isotope probing (
5
N
2
-DNA-SIP) method to identify free-living diazotrophs in soil that are responsible for nitrogen fixation in situ. Analyses of 16S rRNA genes from
15
N-labeled DNA provide evidence for nitrogen fixation by three microbial groups, one of which belongs to the
Rhizobiales
while the other two represent deeply divergent lineages of noncultivated bacteria within the
Betaproteobacteria
and
Actinobacteria
, respectively. Analysis of
nifH
genes from
15
N-labeled DNA also revealed three microbial groups, one of which was associated with
Alphaproteobacteria
while the others were associated with two noncultivated groups that are deeply divergent within
nifH
cluster I. These results reveal that noncultivated free-living diazotrophs can mediate nitrogen fixation in soils and that
15
N
2
-DNA-SIP can be used to gain access to DNA from these organisms. In addition, this research provides the first evidence for nitrogen fixation by
Actinobacteria
outside of the order
Actinomycetales
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
137 articles.
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