克雷纳恰奥塔
古细菌
氨单加氧酶
广域古菌界
塔玛丘塔
硝化作用
硝酸盐
氮气循环
土壤水分
环境化学
生物
土壤微生物学
化学
细菌
生态学
氮气
遗传学
有机化学
作者
Sven Leininger,Tim Urich,Michael Schloter,Lorenz Schwark,Ji Qi,Graeme W. Nicol,James I. Prosser,Stephan C. Schuster,Christa Schleper
出处
期刊:Nature
[Springer Nature]
日期:2006-08-01
卷期号:442 (7104): 806-809
被引量:2185
摘要
Ammonia oxidation is the first step in nitrification, a key process in the global nitrogen cycle that results in the formation of nitrate through microbial activity. The increase in nitrate availability in soils is important for plant nutrition, but it also has considerable impact on groundwater pollution owing to leaching. Here we show that archaeal ammonia oxidizers are more abundant in soils than their well-known bacterial counterparts. We investigated the abundance of the gene encoding a subunit of the key enzyme ammonia monooxygenase (amoA) in 12 pristine and agricultural soils of three climatic zones. amoA gene copies of Crenarchaeota (Archaea) were up to 3,000-fold more abundant than bacterial amoA genes. High amounts of crenarchaeota-specific lipids, including crenarchaeol, correlated with the abundance of archaeal amoA gene copies. Furthermore, reverse transcription quantitative PCR studies and complementary DNA analysis using novel cloning-independent pyrosequencing technology demonstrated the activity of the archaea in situ and supported the numerical dominance of archaeal over bacterial ammonia oxidizers. Our results indicate that crenarchaeota may be the most abundant ammonia-oxidizing organisms in soil ecosystems on Earth.
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