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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, October 2000, p. 4180-4186, Vol. 66, No. 10
Ecosystem Sciences Division, Department of
Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of
California, Berkeley, California 94720-3110
Received 21 March 2000/Accepted 12 July 2000
Stable isotope analysis is a major tool used in ecosystem studies
to establish pathways and rates of C exchange between various ecosystem
components. Little is known about isotopic effects of many such
components, especially microbes. Here we report on the discovery of an
unexpected pattern of C isotopic discrimination by basidiomycete fungi
with far-reaching consequences for our understanding of isotopic
processing in ecosystems where these microbes mediate material
transfers across trophic levels. We measured fractionation effects on
three ecologically relevant basidiomycete species under controlled
laboratory conditions. Sucrose derived from C3 and
C4 plants is fractionated differentially by these microbes
in a taxon-specific manner. The differentiation between mycorrhizal and
saprotrophic fungi observed in the field by others is not explained by
intrinsic discrimination patterns. Fractionation occurs during sugar
uptake and is sensitive to the nonrandom distribution of stable
isotopes in the sucrose molecule. The balance between respiratory
physiology and fermentative physiology modulates the degree of
fractionation. These discoveries disprove the assumption that fungal C
processing does not significantly alter the distribution of stable C
isotopes and provide the basis for a reevaluation of ecosystem models
based on isotopic evidence that involve C transfer across microbial
interfaces. We provide a mechanism to account for the observed
differential discrimination effects.
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Differential C Isotope Discrimination by Fungi
during Decomposition of C3- and
C4-Derived Sucrose
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Ecosystem
Sciences Division, Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and
Management, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-3110. Phone:
(510) 643-2452. Fax: (510) 643-5098. E-mail:
ichapela{at}nature.berkeley.edu.
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