1. The use of extracellular DNA as a proxy for specific microbial activity.
- Author
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Nagler, Magdalena, Podmirseg, Sabine Marie, Griffith, Gareth Wyn, Insam, Heribert, and Ascher-Jenull, Judith
- Subjects
DNA analysis ,EXTRACELLULAR fluid ,DEHYDROGENASES ,OXIDOREDUCTASES ,SYNTROPHINS - Abstract
The ubiquity and relevance of extracellular DNA (exDNA) are well-known and increasingly gaining importance in many fields of application such as medicine and environmental microbiology. Although sources and types of exDNA are manifold, ratios of specific DNA-molecules inside and outside of living cells can give reliable information about the activity of entire systems and of specific microbial groups or species. Here, we introduce a method to discriminate between internal (iDNA), as well as bound and free exDNA, and evaluate various DNA fractions and related ratios (ex:iDNA) regarding their applicability to be used as a fast, convenient, and reliable alternative to more tedious RNA-based activity measurements. In order to deal with microbial consortia that can be regulated regarding their activity, we tested and evaluated the proposed method in comparison to sophisticated dehydrogenase- and RNA-based activity measurements with two anaerobic microbial consortia (anaerobic fungi and syntrophic archaea and a microbial rumen consortium) and three levels of resolution (overall activity, total bacteria, methanogenic archaea). Furthermore, we introduce a 28S rRNA gene-specific primer set and qPCR protocol, targeting anaerobic fungi (
Neocallimastigomycota ). Our findings show that the amount of actively released free exDNA (fDNA) strongly correlates with different activity measurements and is thus suggested to serve as a proxy for microbial activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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