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Uncultured bacterial diversity in tropical maize (Zea mays L.) rhizosphere.
J Basic Microbiol. 2011 Feb; 51(1):15-32.JB

Abstract

Structure of maize (Zea mays L.) rhizosphere bacteria was evaluated to explore the feasibility of identifying novel rhizosphere bacteria using culture-independent method based on direct amplification and analysis of 16S rRNA gene (rRNA) sequences and especially to obtain a better understanding of bacterial community structure and diversity from maize. A total of 274 sequences were analyzed and assigned 48.00% Proteobacteria, 10.30% Actinobacteria, 9.90% Bacteroidetes, 6.60% Verrucomicrobia, 4.80% Acidobacteria, 1.80% Firmicutes, 1.50% Chloroflexi, 1.50% TM7, 1.10% Deinococcus-Thermus, 0.70% Planctomycetes, 0.70% Gemmatimonadetes and 0.40% Cyanobacteria. Economically important phyla Actinobacteria was second most dominant group after Proteobacteria, in our clone library. It would be interesting to hypothesize that root exudates from maize rhizosphere favors growth of Actinobacteria like microbes to eliminate pathogenic bacteria and decompose plant matter, for enhanced plant and soil health. An additional 12.8% of clone library (35 operational taxonomical units (OTUs) from 43 clones) with less than 94% similarity to any GenBank sequence could not be assigned to any known phylum and may represent unidentified bacterial lineages and suggests that a large amount of the rhizobacterial diversity remains to be characterized by culturing.

Authors+Show Affiliations

National Botanical Research Institute, Rana Pratap Marg, Lucknow, India.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

21259285

Citation

Chauhan, Puneet Singh, et al. "Uncultured Bacterial Diversity in Tropical Maize (Zea Mays L.) Rhizosphere." Journal of Basic Microbiology, vol. 51, no. 1, 2011, pp. 15-32.
Chauhan PS, Chaudhry V, Mishra S, et al. Uncultured bacterial diversity in tropical maize (Zea mays L.) rhizosphere. J Basic Microbiol. 2011;51(1):15-32.
Chauhan, P. S., Chaudhry, V., Mishra, S., & Nautiyal, C. S. (2011). Uncultured bacterial diversity in tropical maize (Zea mays L.) rhizosphere. Journal of Basic Microbiology, 51(1), 15-32. https://doi.org/10.1002/jobm.201000171
Chauhan PS, et al. Uncultured Bacterial Diversity in Tropical Maize (Zea Mays L.) Rhizosphere. J Basic Microbiol. 2011;51(1):15-32. PubMed PMID: 21259285.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Uncultured bacterial diversity in tropical maize (Zea mays L.) rhizosphere. AU - Chauhan,Puneet Singh, AU - Chaudhry,Vasvi, AU - Mishra,Sandhya, AU - Nautiyal,Chandra Shekhar, Y1 - 2011/01/24/ PY - 2010/05/05/received PY - 2010/08/29/accepted PY - 2011/1/25/entrez PY - 2011/1/25/pubmed PY - 2011/5/6/medline SP - 15 EP - 32 JF - Journal of basic microbiology JO - J Basic Microbiol VL - 51 IS - 1 N2 - Structure of maize (Zea mays L.) rhizosphere bacteria was evaluated to explore the feasibility of identifying novel rhizosphere bacteria using culture-independent method based on direct amplification and analysis of 16S rRNA gene (rRNA) sequences and especially to obtain a better understanding of bacterial community structure and diversity from maize. A total of 274 sequences were analyzed and assigned 48.00% Proteobacteria, 10.30% Actinobacteria, 9.90% Bacteroidetes, 6.60% Verrucomicrobia, 4.80% Acidobacteria, 1.80% Firmicutes, 1.50% Chloroflexi, 1.50% TM7, 1.10% Deinococcus-Thermus, 0.70% Planctomycetes, 0.70% Gemmatimonadetes and 0.40% Cyanobacteria. Economically important phyla Actinobacteria was second most dominant group after Proteobacteria, in our clone library. It would be interesting to hypothesize that root exudates from maize rhizosphere favors growth of Actinobacteria like microbes to eliminate pathogenic bacteria and decompose plant matter, for enhanced plant and soil health. An additional 12.8% of clone library (35 operational taxonomical units (OTUs) from 43 clones) with less than 94% similarity to any GenBank sequence could not be assigned to any known phylum and may represent unidentified bacterial lineages and suggests that a large amount of the rhizobacterial diversity remains to be characterized by culturing. SN - 1521-4028 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/21259285/Uncultured_bacterial_diversity_in_tropical_maize__Zea_mays_L___rhizosphere_ L2 - https://doi.org/10.1002/jobm.201000171 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -