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Boersma, FGH; Warmink, JA; Andreote, FA; van Elsas, JD. 2009. Selection of Sphingomonadaceae at the Base of Laccaria proxima and Russula exalbicans Fruiting Bodies. APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY. 75(7):1979-1989.
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The dense hyphal network directly underneath the fruiting bodies of
ectomycorrhizal fungi might exert strong influences on the bacterial
community of soil. Such fruiting bodies might serve as hot spots for
bacterial activity, for instance by providing nutrients and
colonization sites in soil. Here, we assessed the putative selection of
specific members of the Sphingomonadaceae family at the bases of the
fruiting bodies of the ectomycorrhizal fungi Laccaria proxima and
Russula exalbicans in comparison to the adjacent bulk soil. To do so,
we used a previously designed Sphingomonadaceae-specific PCR-denaturing
gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) system and complemented this with
analyses of sequences from a Sphingomonadaceae-specific clone library.
The analyses showed clear selective effects of the fruiting bodies of
both fungi on the Sphingomonadaceae community structures. The effect
was especially prevalent with R. exalbicans. Strikingly, similar fungi
sampled approximately 100 m apart showed similar DGGE patterns, while
corresponding bulk soil-derived patterns differed from each other.
However, the mycospheres of L. proxima and R. exalbicans still revealed
divergent community structures, indicating that different fungi select
for different members of the Sphingomonadaceae family. Excision of
specific bands from the DGGE patterns, as well as analyses of the clone
libraries generated from both habitats, revealed fruiting body-specific
Sphingomonadaceae types. It further showed that major groups from the
mycospheres of R. exalbicans and L. proxima did not cluster with known
bacteria from the database, indicating new groups within the family of
Sphingomonadaceae present in these environments.
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