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Barbieri, E; Guidi, C; Bertaux, J; Frey-Klett, P; Garbaye, J; Ceccaroli, P; Saltarelli, R;
Zambonelli, A; Stocchi, V. 2007. Occurrence and diversity of bacterial communities in Tuber magnatum
during truffle maturation. ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY. 9(9):2234-2246.
Address:
Barbieri, E, Univ Urbino, Ist Chim Biol Giorgio Fornaini, Via Saffi 2,
I-61029 Urbino, Italy
Tuber magnatum, an ascomycetous fungus and obligate ectomycorrhizal
symbiont, forms hypogeous fruit bodies, commonly called Italian white
truffles. The diversity of bacterial communities associated with T.
magnatum truffles was investigated using culture-independent and
-dependent 16S rRNA gene-based approaches. Eighteen truffles were
classified in three groups, representing different degrees of ascocarp
maturation, based on the percentage of asci containing mature spores.
The culturable bacterial fraction was (4.17 +/- 1.61) x 10(7), (2.60
+/- 1.22) x 10(7) and (1.86 +/- 1.32) x 10(6) cfu g(-1) for immature,
intermediate and mature ascocarps respectively. The total of bacteria
count was two orders of magnitude higher than the cfu g(-1) count.
Sequencing results from the clone library showed a significant presence
of alpha-Proteobacteria (634 of the 771 total clones screened, c. 82%)
affiliated with Sinorhizobium, Rhizobium and Bradyrhizobium spp. The
bacterial culturable fraction was generally represented by
gamma-Proteobacteria (210 of the 384 total strains isolated, c. 55%),
which were mostly fluorescent pseudomonads. Fluorescent in situ
hybridization confirmed that alpha-Proteobacteria (85.8%) were the
predominant components of truffle bacterial communities with
beta-Proteobacteria (1.5%), gamma-Proteobacteria (1.9%), Bacteroidetes
(2.1%), Firmicutes (2.4%) and Actinobacteria (3%) only poorly
represented. Molecular approaches made it possible to identify
alpha-Proteobacteria as major constituents of a bacterial component
associated with T. magnatum ascoma, independently from the degree of
maturation.
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