Detection of active soil fungi by RT-PCR amplificatio of precursor rRNA molecules.

Microbial ecologists have used direct RT-PCR amplification of 16S rRNA molecules for the detection of active species of bacteria and archaea, and 18S rRNA molecules for the detection of active fungi. The drawback to this approach for fungi is that 18S rRNA sequences often do not provide sufficient taxonomic resolution to allow identification of taxa in mixed communities to genus or species level. Internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences are known to be more taxonomically informative than 18S rRNA sequences and are the common target in DNA based studies but are thought to be absent from RNA pools as they are cleaved after transcription of the large rRNA precursor molecule to leave the mature rRNA's for ribosome synthesis. Here we show, however, that fungal ITS regions can be detected in RNA pools by RT-PCR amplification of fungal precursor rRNA molecules. This suggests that precursor rRNA molecules reside in the cells of active fungi for sufficient time to allow RT-PCR amplification of ITS regions prior to their removal by post-transcriptional cleavage. The RT-PCR conditions for this approach were initially optimised using a range of fungi grown in pure culture prior to applying the approach to complex fungal communities in two contrasting soil types.

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Main Authors: Anderson, Ian C. 41705, autor. aut, Parkin, Pamela I. 41706.
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:ng
Published: ©200
Subjects:Hongos del suelo., Hongos., Plagas.,
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spelling cat-fedepalma-277262022-08-05T00:22:14ZDetection of active soil fungi by RT-PCR amplificatio of precursor rRNA molecules. Anderson, Ian C. 41705, autor. aut Parkin, Pamela I. 41706. text©2007ng Microbial ecologists have used direct RT-PCR amplification of 16S rRNA molecules for the detection of active species of bacteria and archaea, and 18S rRNA molecules for the detection of active fungi. The drawback to this approach for fungi is that 18S rRNA sequences often do not provide sufficient taxonomic resolution to allow identification of taxa in mixed communities to genus or species level. Internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences are known to be more taxonomically informative than 18S rRNA sequences and are the common target in DNA based studies but are thought to be absent from RNA pools as they are cleaved after transcription of the large rRNA precursor molecule to leave the mature rRNA's for ribosome synthesis. Here we show, however, that fungal ITS regions can be detected in RNA pools by RT-PCR amplification of fungal precursor rRNA molecules. This suggests that precursor rRNA molecules reside in the cells of active fungi for sufficient time to allow RT-PCR amplification of ITS regions prior to their removal by post-transcriptional cleavage. The RT-PCR conditions for this approach were initially optimised using a range of fungi grown in pure culture prior to applying the approach to complex fungal communities in two contrasting soil types.Incluye referencias bibliográficas.Microbial ecologists have used direct RT-PCR amplification of 16S rRNA molecules for the detection of active species of bacteria and archaea, and 18S rRNA molecules for the detection of active fungi. The drawback to this approach for fungi is that 18S rRNA sequences often do not provide sufficient taxonomic resolution to allow identification of taxa in mixed communities to genus or species level. Internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences are known to be more taxonomically informative than 18S rRNA sequences and are the common target in DNA based studies but are thought to be absent from RNA pools as they are cleaved after transcription of the large rRNA precursor molecule to leave the mature rRNA's for ribosome synthesis. Here we show, however, that fungal ITS regions can be detected in RNA pools by RT-PCR amplification of fungal precursor rRNA molecules. This suggests that precursor rRNA molecules reside in the cells of active fungi for sufficient time to allow RT-PCR amplification of ITS regions prior to their removal by post-transcriptional cleavage. The RT-PCR conditions for this approach were initially optimised using a range of fungi grown in pure culture prior to applying the approach to complex fungal communities in two contrasting soil types.Hongos del suelo.Hongos.Plagas.
institution FEDEPALMA
collection Koha
country Colombia
countrycode CO
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode cat-fedepalma
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Centro de Información y Documentación Palmero
language ng
topic Hongos del suelo.
Hongos.
Plagas.
Hongos del suelo.
Hongos.
Plagas.
spellingShingle Hongos del suelo.
Hongos.
Plagas.
Hongos del suelo.
Hongos.
Plagas.
Anderson, Ian C. 41705, autor. aut
Parkin, Pamela I. 41706.
Detection of active soil fungi by RT-PCR amplificatio of precursor rRNA molecules.
description Microbial ecologists have used direct RT-PCR amplification of 16S rRNA molecules for the detection of active species of bacteria and archaea, and 18S rRNA molecules for the detection of active fungi. The drawback to this approach for fungi is that 18S rRNA sequences often do not provide sufficient taxonomic resolution to allow identification of taxa in mixed communities to genus or species level. Internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequences are known to be more taxonomically informative than 18S rRNA sequences and are the common target in DNA based studies but are thought to be absent from RNA pools as they are cleaved after transcription of the large rRNA precursor molecule to leave the mature rRNA's for ribosome synthesis. Here we show, however, that fungal ITS regions can be detected in RNA pools by RT-PCR amplification of fungal precursor rRNA molecules. This suggests that precursor rRNA molecules reside in the cells of active fungi for sufficient time to allow RT-PCR amplification of ITS regions prior to their removal by post-transcriptional cleavage. The RT-PCR conditions for this approach were initially optimised using a range of fungi grown in pure culture prior to applying the approach to complex fungal communities in two contrasting soil types.
format Texto
topic_facet Hongos del suelo.
Hongos.
Plagas.
author Anderson, Ian C. 41705, autor. aut
Parkin, Pamela I. 41706.
author_facet Anderson, Ian C. 41705, autor. aut
Parkin, Pamela I. 41706.
author_sort Anderson, Ian C. 41705, autor. aut
title Detection of active soil fungi by RT-PCR amplificatio of precursor rRNA molecules.
title_short Detection of active soil fungi by RT-PCR amplificatio of precursor rRNA molecules.
title_full Detection of active soil fungi by RT-PCR amplificatio of precursor rRNA molecules.
title_fullStr Detection of active soil fungi by RT-PCR amplificatio of precursor rRNA molecules.
title_full_unstemmed Detection of active soil fungi by RT-PCR amplificatio of precursor rRNA molecules.
title_sort detection of active soil fungi by rt-pcr amplificatio of precursor rrna molecules.
publishDate ©200
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AT parkinpamelai41706 detectionofactivesoilfungibyrtpcramplificatioofprecursorrrnamolecules
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