Rich_2011_Environ.Microbiol_13_116

Reference

Title : Time-series analyses of Monterey Bay coastal microbial picoplankton using a 'genome proxy' microarray - Rich_2011_Environ.Microbiol_13_116
Author(s) : Rich VI , Pham VD , Eppley J , Shi Y , DeLong EF
Ref : Environ Microbiol , 13 :116 , 2011
Abstract :

To investigate the temporal, spatial and phylogenetic resolution of marine microbial community structure and variability, we designed and expanded a genome proxy array (an oligonucleotide microarray targeting marine microbial genome fragments and genomes), evaluated it against metagenomic sequencing, and applied it to time-series samples from the Monterey Bay. The expanded array targeted 268 microbial genotypes across much of the known diversity of cultured and uncultured marine microbes. The target abundances measured by the array were highly correlated to pyrosequence-based abundances (linear regression R(2) = 0.85-0.91, P < 0.0001). Fifty-seven samples from approximately 4 years in Monterey Bay were examined with the array, spanning the photic zone (0 m), the base of the surface mixed layer (30 m) and the subphotic zone (200 m). A significant portion of the expanded genome proxy array's targets showed signal (95 out of 268 targets present in >/= 1 sample). The multi-year community survey showed the consistent presence of a core group of common and abundant targeted taxa at each depth in Monterey Bay, higher variability among shallow than deep samples, and episodic occurrences of more transient marine genotypes. The abundance of the most dominant genotypes peaked after strong episodic upwelling events. The genome-proxy array's ability to track populations of closely related genotypes indicated population shifts within several abundant target taxa, with specific populations in some cases clustering by depth or oceanographic season. Although 51 cultivated organisms were targeted (representing 19% of the array) the majority of targets detected and of total target signal (85% and approximately 92% respectively) were from uncultivated genotypes, often those derived from Monterey Bay. The array provided a relatively cost-effective approach ( approximately 15 dollars per array) for surveying the natural history of uncultivated lineages.

PubMedSearch : Rich_2011_Environ.Microbiol_13_116
PubMedID: 20695878

Related information

Gene_locus_frgt 9sphi-e0xrf0    9delt-e0xs37

Citations formats

Rich VI, Pham VD, Eppley J, Shi Y, DeLong EF (2011)
Time-series analyses of Monterey Bay coastal microbial picoplankton using a 'genome proxy' microarray
Environ Microbiol 13 :116

Rich VI, Pham VD, Eppley J, Shi Y, DeLong EF (2011)
Environ Microbiol 13 :116