151. Extraction of microbial proteome from soil: potential and limitations assessed through a model study.
- Author
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Giagnoni, L., Magherini, F., Landi, L., Taghavi, S., Modesti, A., Bini, L., Nannipieri, P., Van der lelie, D., and Renella, G.
- Subjects
PROTEOMICS ,HUMIC acid ,GEL electrophoresis ,MONTMORILLONITE ,BIOINFORMATICS - Abstract
Proteomics is the study of functions and regulation of biological systems based on the analysis of the protein expression profile, and there is a general agreement that soil proteomics may be a tool for better soil management. Because of the ability of soils to stabilize extracellular proteins by various mechanisms, development of soil proteomics needs an assessment of the efficiency of protein extraction from various soil types. We evaluated the possibility of extraction of soil microbial proteome by inoculating Cupriavidus metallidurans CH34, which has a known proteome, into sterile sand, kaolinite, montmorillonite and a mixture of sand, kaolinite, montmorillonite, goethite and humic acids. One hour after inoculation, the viability of C. metallidurans was determined by the colony-forming units method (CFU), the amount of extracted proteins was determined by the Bradford method and the bacterial proteome was analysed by the two-dimensional gel electrophoresis technique (2D-GE). The bacterial number was 2.5 × 10 CFU g of soil in all microcosms, whereas the total extracted protein content varied from 98.1 to 1268 µg g in the various microcosms, but was undetectable in the inoculated montmorillonite. The number of protein spots from the bacterial culture and the inoculated microcosms varied between 317 and 591, with 54 variable spots among the pure culture and the microcosms. No protein spots were detected in the 2D-GE from the montmorillonite microcosm. The 2D-GE of artificial soil microcosms showed a protein pattern that was different from those of pure culture and sand and kaolinite microcosms. The results confirm the importance of clay-specific surface area and CEC in protein adsorption as montmorillonite alone had the largest sorptive capacity, and show that the artificial soil used also had a large sorptive capacity for microbial proteins. Globally, the results indicate that the extraction of proteins from soils is strongly influenced by the clay type and organic matter content, and that poor protein extraction efficiency may reduce the potential of soil proteomics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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