Affiliation:
1. Center for Microbial Ecology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A PCR-based approach was developed to recover nitric oxide (NO) reductase (
norB
) genes as a functional marker gene for denitrifying bacteria.
norB
database sequences grouped in two very distinct branches. One encodes the quinol-oxidizing single-subunit class (qNorB), while the other class is a cytochrome
bc
-type complex (cNorB). The latter oxidizes cytochrome
c
, and the gene is localized adjacent to
norC
. While both
norB
types occur in denitrifying strains, the
qnorB
type was also found in a variety of nondenitrifying strains, suggesting a function in detoxifying NO. Branch-specific degenerate primer sets detected the two
norB
types in our denitrifier cultures. Specificity was confirmed by sequence analysis of the
norB
amplicons and failure to amplify
norB
from nondenitrifying strains. These primer sets also specifically amplified
norB
from freshwater and marine sediments. Pairwise comparison of amplified
norB
sequences indicated minimum levels of amino acid identity of 43.9% for
qnorB
and 38% for
cnorB
. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed the existence of two classes of
norB
genes, which clustered according to the respective primer set. Within the
qnorB
cluster, the majority of genes from isolates and a few environmental clones formed a separate subcluster. Most environmental
qnorB
clones originating from both habitats clustered into two distinct subclusters of novel sequences from presumably as yet uncultivated organisms.
cnorB
clones were located on separate branches within subclusters of genes from known organisms, suggesting an origin from similar organisms.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
229 articles.
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