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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2005, p. 7679-7689, Vol. 71, No. 12
0099-2240/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.71.12.7679-7689.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Agronomy,1 Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 479072
Received 26 November 2004/ Accepted 24 July 2005
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A confounding factor in metal-contaminated sites is the frequent co-occurrence of organic contaminants. These organic molecules may be metabolizable energy sources, toxicants, or both. The combined effect of metals and organic carbon pollutants on microbial activity and community composition is unclear since no studies have addressed this point. If species richness is reduced in sites contaminated with complex mixtures, the communities may be less resilient because the probability that an ecotype is capable of a specific required function is reduced (13). Previous research in our laboratory showed that the microbial community structure in a long-term mixed-waste contaminated site might reflect both metal and aromatic hydrocarbon concentrations in the soil. For individual microbes to persist under complex conditions, they must tolerate both local metal and hydrocarbon contaminants. Shi et al. (42) found a very broad distribution of metal tolerances within the microbial communities in these soils. This is consistent with a heterogeneous distribution of microbes in both highly contaminated and noncontaminated microsites.
For this study, we used microcosms to segregate the effects of two metals, Pb and Cr, and also to study the impact of aromatic hydrocarbons on microbial community structure and activity. By using microcosms, soils could be homogenized to evenly distribute both the microbial populations and toxicants and thereby reduce spatial variability. This allowed us to test experimental additions of Pb2+ or Cr6+ and to assess their effects on the microbial community. One of two energy substrates (glucose or xylene) was added to provide the necessary force for selection to operate and drive changes in community composition. Glucose is broadly utilized by microorganisms; xylene catabolism is more restricted among microbes, and xylene mimics aromatic compounds present in these soils. The changes in community activity were related to molecular analyses of community composition and functional gene levels.
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Soil microcosms consisted of 100-ml serum bottles containing 12 g dry weight of soil. A total of eight metal-carbon combinations and three control treatments were tested. The combinations included glucose or xylene with low or high Pb, glucose or xylene with low or high Cr, and control treatments with additions of glucose only, xylene only, and no addition of organic or metal. Xylene or glucose was added at a concentration of 3,000 µg per gram of soil. Preliminary experiments determined that carbon mineralization was maximized at this concentration. A sterilized glucose solution was added to the microcosms, whereas xylene was added to the soil by first mixing 418.6 µl of xylene to 10 g of sand and then adding 1 g of the xylene-sand mixture to each microcosm. To minimize volatilization, all xylene additions were done over dry ice. The soils were mixed manually to distribute the substrates as homogeneously as possible. The concentrations of metals were chosen to reduce substrate-induced carbon mineralization by 50% (L) and 90% (H). These concentrations were determined for each substrate in preliminary experiments. The L and H metal concentrations were 3 and 10 mg g1 of Pb (corresponds to 36 and 122 mmol kg1) with glucose or xylene, 0.4 and 4 mg g1 of Cr(VI) (corresponds to 16 and 160 mmol kg1) with glucose, and 10 and 18 µg g1 of Cr(VI) (corresponds to 0.4 and 0.7 mmol kg1) with xylene. Solutions of Pb as Pb(NO3)2 and of Cr(VI) as K2CrO4 were evenly dispersed in microcosms. The final moisture concentration of each microcosm was adjusted to a 60% water-holding capacity; the adjustments were made after measuring the water-holding capacity of the soil, as described previously (11). The microcosms were then sealed. They were weighed every week to check that the moisture content remained at the same level.
Three microcosms were destructively sampled on days 0, 4, 7, 10, 13, 16, 20, 25, and 31 for CO2, total biomass (phospholipid phosphates), and soil DNA measurements. First, 0.5 ml of headspace gas was removed from each microcosm by use of a syringe and injected into a gas chromatograph (HP series II 5890) to measure the CO2 content. Numbers of cultivable Cr-resistant and xylene-degrading bacteria were immediately estimated from the xylene-plus-high-Cr microcosms, using 1 g of soil. For microcosms that received Cr(VI), 1 g of soil was extracted with water, and the amount of soluble Cr(VI) was determined spectrophotometrically using the diphenylcarbazide assay (12). For microbial community analysis, 2 g of soil was placed in a microcentrifuge tube and frozen until DNA could be extracted. The remaining soil was stored in a small ziplock bag and frozen for biomass (phospholipid-PO4) and fatty acid methyl ester analyses.
Phospholipid analysis.
Phospholipids were extracted using the method of Findlay (16). Extractions were done in triplicate with 10 g of soil. Total lipid was extracted from the soils using a methanol-chloroform-phosphate buffer (1:2:0.8), and phospholipids were fractionated by column chromatography. The microbial biomass was estimated from the phospholipid-PO4 content of the soil. A 100-µl portion of the phospholipid extract was used to determine the amount of phospholipid-PO4 after potassium persulfate digestion by use of a colorimetric assay (1).
Enumeration of cultivable bacteria.
Total cultivable bacteria and those that were Cr resistant were enumerated from 1 g (wet mass) soil from the xylene-plus-high-Cr microcosms on days 0 (prior to the addition of xylene and Cr), 4, 7, 10, 13, 16, 20, 25, and 31. Soils were first suspended in 10 ml of xenobiotic basal salts medium (23) and vortexed. Serial dilutions (102 to 105) of the soil suspension were made, and 100-µl samples were plated in triplicate onto xenobiotic basal salts agar plates with xylene plus 1 mM K2CrO4 and onto 0.1x nutrient agar (NA) plates with and without the addition of 5 mM K2CrO4. Xylene was supplied as a vapor saturating the atmosphere of the enclosure used to incubate the plates. The number of colonies was counted after 4 or 7 days of incubation at 25°C.
DNA extraction, PCR, and denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE).
Soil DNAs from approximately 0.5 g of soil were extracted using a FastDNA spin kit for soil (QBIOgene, Carlsbad, CA) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The resolution of extracts in a 0.7% agarose gel containing ethidium bromide (0.3 µg ml1) was used to estimate the DNA quantity and quality.
Changes in the microbial community of the microcosms were followed over time by DGGE of PCR products from 16S rRNA genes as previously described (31, 33). Briefly, the V3 region of the 16S rRNA gene was amplified by using primer PRBA338f (5' AC TCC TAC GGG AGG CAG CAG 3') (32) with a GC clamp (5'-CGC CCG CCG CGC GCG GCG GGC GGG GCG GGG GCA CGG GGG G-3') attached to the 5' end and primer PRUN518r (5'-ATT ACC GCG GCT GCT GG-3') (27). PCR mixtures contained 1x PCR buffer (Promega, Madison, WI), 3.5 mM MgCl2, 0.8 µmol of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate, 0.1% bovine serum albumin, 0.5 µM (each) forward and reverse primers, 5 U of Taq polymerase, and 1 to 50 ng of template DNA. Amplification was performed by 5 min of denaturation at 94°C and then 30 cycles of 30 s each at 92°C, 55°C, and 72°C, followed by a final extension at 72°C for 15 min using a PTC-100 thermal cycler (MJ Research Inc., Watertown, MA). PCR products were confirmed in a 1.0% agarose gel containing ethidium bromide (0.3 µg ml1); the fluorescence intensity was used to estimate their quantities.
For DGGE, equivalent quantities of PCR products were resolved in an 8% (wt/vol) polyacrylamide gel (37.5:1 acrylamide:bisacrylamide) in 0.5x TAE (20mM Tris-HCl, 10 mM acetate, 0.5 mM EDTA) and denaturants (100% denaturant contains 7 M urea and 40% deionized formamide). A gradient of denaturants ranging from 35% to 58% was used to compare communities. Narrower gradients (35 to 45% or 45 to 58%) were used to resolve putative doublets. Electrophoresis was performed on a D-Gene apparatus (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) at a constant voltage of 20 V for 15 min, followed by 200 V for 5.5 h. After electrophoresis, gels were stained with SYBR green I (Cambrex Bio Science, Rockland, ME) and then photographed with a Polaroid camera (Cambridge, MA).
Statistical analysis.
Profiles generated by PCR-DGGE were analyzed using the BioNumerics program (Applied Maths, Belgium). Comparisons were made between each fingerprint from the microcosm samples collected over time. The program uses binary data based on the presence or absence of each band in the fingerprint profile pairs being compared. The phospholipid fatty acid results were analyzed using a similar approach (Star Chromatography Workstation software; Varian Inc.). Community similarities based on DGGE bands were then quantified by principal component analysis (36) using BioNumerics software.
Multiplex PCR.
Microcosm soil samples were initially screened for aromatic oxygenase genes using previously described PCR primers and multiplex PCR protocols (7). This method was also used to screen all isolates cultivated from the microcosms. Briefly, individual primer sets were used to amplify portions of the naphthalene dioxygenase, toluene dioxygenase (TOD), toluene monooxygenase, ring-hydroxylating toluene monooxygenase (RMO), phenol hydroxylase (PHE), and biphenyl dioxygenase (three different primer sets [for BPH1, BPH2, and BPH4]) genes. All PCR experiments included reaction mixtures with DNA extracts from appropriate positive control strains and mixtures containing no template. The positive controls used were as follows: for naphthalene dioxygenase, Pseudomonas putida G7; for TOD, Pseudomonas putida F1; for toluene monooxygenase, Pseudomonas putida HS1; for RMO, Pseudomonas aeruginosa JI104; for PHE, Pseudomonas sp. strain CF600; for BPH1, Comamonas testosteroni B-356; for BPH2, Pseudomonas pseuodoalcaligenes KF707; and for BPH4, Rhodococcus sp. strain RHA1. PCR products were routinely visualized by running 10 µl of PCR mixture in 1% agarose gels (Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA) in 1x Tris-acetate-EDTA (41) with ethidium bromide (0.3 µg ml1) staining.
Real-time quantitative PCR with SYBR green I.
Genes that were detected in the initial PCR screen were quantified by real-time PCR using samples collected on days 0, 16, and 25 of the microcosm experiment. Real-time PCR was performed on an ABI 7700 Sequence Detector instrument (version 1.7 software; Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA). Quantitative PCR mixtures contained 1x cloned Pfu buffer, 1 U PfuTurbo HotStart DNA polymerase (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA), a 0.2 mM concentration of each deoxynucleoside triphosphate, SYBR green I (1:30,000; Cambrex Bio Science, Rockland, ME), and MgCl2 at a concentration optimized for each primer set. Annealing and polymerization temperatures, primer concentrations, and MgCl2 concentrations for real-time PCR were the same as those described previously (5). Calibration curves for each target were made with standards during each real-time PCR experiment. The full-strength extract and a 1:10 dilution of all environmental samples were analyzed in duplicate. The Sequence Detector software subtracted the background signal for each sample determined in cycles 3 through 15. The fluorescence threshold was defined as 10 times the standard deviation of the background signal. The threshold cycle (CT) was defined as the fractional cycle number in which the signal exceeded the fluorescence threshold. The computed threshold cycle inversely correlated with the log of the initial template concentration. The best fit (by the method of least squares) was then used to plot the standard curve. The lower detection limit was defined as the lowest template concentration that resulted in a threshold cycle that was significantly less than the total number of cycles performed (
= 0.05).
Nucleotide sequence determination.
The nucleotide sequences of select bands from DGGE profiles using the DGGE primers listed above were also determined (28, 32). Bands from day 31 of the xylene-plus-high-Cr(VI) treatment were targeted, as were the strong bands that arose in response to glucose alone. Reagents and conditions for PCR were used as previously described (28). Sequences of specific DGGE bands were determined by excision of the band, elution in sterilized PCR water, reamplification with primers 341-f and 534-r (without the GC clamp), and cloning of the amplicons into the pGEM-T Easy cloning vector (Promega, Madison, WI). Nucleotide sequences were determined using a Thermo Sequenase cycle sequencing kit (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ) and an ALFexpress automated sequencer (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). For all amplicons, the sequence was analyzed in both the forward and reverse directions, and in most cases two clones were sequenced for each excised band. Nucleotide sequences were compared to sequences in the National Center for Biotechnology Information GenBank database by using the BLASTn program (2).
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The nucleotide sequences obtained in this study have been deposited in the GenBank database under accession no. DQ016373 to DQ016386.
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FIG. 1. Cumulative carbon mineralization of microcosms amended with glucose and lead (A), xylene and lead (B), glucose and chromate (C), and xylene and chromate (D). Treatment microcosms received 3,000 µg g1 of either glucose or xylene with low lead (LPb) at 3,000 µg Pb2+ g1 soil or high lead (HPb) at 10,000 µg g1, glucose with low chromium at 400 µg Cr6+ g1 soil (GLCr) or high chromium at 4,000 µg Cr6+ g1 (GHCr), or xylene with low chromium at 10 µg Cr6+ g1 soil (XLCr) or high chromium at 18 µg Cr6+ g1 (XHCr). dwt, dry weight.
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Relationship of Cr(VI) reduction to C mineralization.
Mineralization increased in the glucose-low-Cr microcosms at a time when 24% of the added Cr(VI) had been reduced (Fig. 2, bottom left panel). However, there was substantial mineralization (60 µg CO2 g soil1 day1) at Cr(VI) levels of 200 to 250 µg g1 soil. In the glucose-high-Cr microcosms, glucose mineralization occurred at Cr(VI) levels above 3,000 µg g1 for the first 25 days, and Cr(VI) reduction was only detected after 25 days of incubation (Fig. 2, top left panel). In contrast, in the xylene-Cr microcosms, a substantial reduction in Cr(VI) preceded the onset of detectable carbon mineralization (Fig. 2, right panels). In xylene-low-Cr microcosms, xylene mineralization was not detected until 6 days after Cr(VI) had disappeared. In the xylene-high-Cr microcosms, Cr(VI) had been reduced by 98% by day 10, and carbon mineralization did not increase above background levels until day 13.
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FIG. 2. Comparison of chromium reduction and carbon mineralization by measuring concentrations of Cr6+ and cumulative CO2 in soil microcosms amended with glucose plus 4,000 µg Cr6+ g1 soil (A), xylene plus 18 µg Cr6+ g1 soil (B), glucose plus 400 µg Cr6+ g1 soil (C), and xylene plus 10 µg Cr6+ g1 soil (D). Treatment microcosms received 3,000 µg g1 of either glucose or xylene.
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FIG. 3. Phospholipid-phosphate biomass in soil microcosms amended with glucose and lead (A), xylene and lead (B), glucose and chromate (C), and xylene and chromate (D). Treatment microcosms received 3,000 µg g1 of either glucose or xylene with low lead (LPb) at 3,000 µg Pb2+ g1 soil or high lead (HPb) at 10,000 µg g1, glucose with low chromium at 400 µg Cr6+ g1 soil (GLCr) or high chromium at 4,000 µg Cr6+ g1 (GHCr), or xylene with low chromium at 10 µg Cr6+ g1 soil (XLCr) or high chromium at 18 µg Cr6+ g1 (XHCr).
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FIG. 4. Number of cultivable bacteria in microcosms that received 3,000 µg g1 of xylene and high chromium at 18 µg Cr6+ g1. , total number of CFU (105 g1) on dilute nutrient agar. Samples were also plated on dilute nutrient agar plus 1 mM K2CrO4, and the viable counts on this medium are expressed as percentages of that on medium without K2CrO4 (). For days 0, 4, and 7, the numbers of chromium-resistant bacteria were less than the detection limit of 3 x 103.
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FIG. 5. Community profiles based on DGGE profiles of the V3 region of the 16S rRNA gene amplified by PCR from DNA extracts from microcosms amended with glucose and lead (A), xylene and lead (B), glucose and chromate (C), and xylene and chromate (D). The number above each lane represents the day the microcosm was sampled. G, glucose; L, low metal; H, high metal; M, markers used to normalize band mobilities between different gels. In panel D, the lanes marked I, II, IIIa, and IIIb indicate xylene-degrading bacterial isolates for which the best 16S rRNA gene sequence matches are as follows: I, Arthrobacter sp.; II, Pseudomonas fluorescens; and IIIa and IIIb, Rhodococcus sp. Arrowheads designate bands matching isolates from group I. Letters a to h and i to k designate bands that were excised and sequenced from gels from xylene and glucose microcosms, respectively. See Table 3 for the phylogenetic identities of these bands.
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FIG. 6. Principal component analysis of PCR-DGGE profiles on days 10 and 31 for microcosms amended with glucose and lead. Treated microcosms received 3,000 µg g1 of glucose (G), low lead (L) at 3,000 µg Pb2+ g1 soil, or high lead (H) at 10,000 µg g1. I, samples analyzed on day 0, prior to amendments. There were three replicates tested for each treatment. The symbols denote the additions and the day of analysis (10 or 31 days).
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FIG. 7. Principal component analysis of PCR-DGGE profiles on day 31 for microcosm series that received either Cr (open symbols) or Pb (solid symbols). Treatment microcosms received 3,000 µg g1 of either glucose or xylene. The data for the two treatment levels of either Pb or Cr (low or high) were pooled. The experiments with additions of Pb or Cr were run at different times; therefore, two sets of control microcosms, to which carbon but not heavy metal was added (glucose only or xylene only), were analyzed, and both sets of controls are plotted.
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Quantification of functional genes that respond to xylene.
Of the eight oxygenases that were screened by PCR, only the biphenyl dioxygenase (BPH4) and phenol hydroxylase (PHE) genes were detected in xylene microcosms. They were found in all microcosms, with the exception of xylene-high-Pb microcosms, where no BPH4 or PHE genes were detected, and xylene-high-Cr microcosms, where the PHE gene was not detected (Tables 1 and 2). In microcosms with no substrate additions, gene copy numbers generally decreased or remained stable over the course of the experiment. An exception was the BPH4 gene in the control microcosms for the Cr treatments, where there was a twofold increase; however, this change was much smaller than the 7- to 60-fold increases in BPH4 and PHE gene copy numbers observed in response to xylene. Pb had a substantial impact on these functional activities. As noted above, gene copy numbers were below the detection limit for high Pb additions. With a low Pb concentration, the BPH4 gene number increased similarly to that in microcosms without Pb, but PHE copy numbers did not. PHE gene numbers were also adversely affected by the addition of Cr, whereas the BPH4 gene copy number increased with either low or high doses of Cr. It is indeterminate whether the selective effects of metals on PHE genes are direct consequences of toxic effects, specifically on an enzyme in this pathway, or are indirect in that the bacterial species containing these genes were more sensitive to Pb or Cr than those expressing BPH4.
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TABLE 1. Estimation of BPH4 copy numbers using real-time PCR
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TABLE 2. Estimation of PHE copy numbers using real-time PCR
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For bacteria that became dominant in response to the addition of xylene and high Cr(VI) but that were not cultured (Fig. 5D), the DNA from the prominent DGGE band was cloned and sequenced. Ten bands were sequenced; similarities of 98 to 100% to sequences in the database were generally found for the ca. 200 bp that were sequenced (Table 3). Eight of the 10 sequences had the best matches to organisms in the Actinomycetales3 to bacteria in the genus Arthrobacter, 3 to Rhodococcus, and 1 each to Nocardiodes and Brevibacillus. The other two sequences best matched those in a Bacillus and a Pseudomonas species.
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TABLE 3. Summary of sequences of cloned bands from DGGE profiles of xylene- and high-chromium-amended microcosms on day 31 (clones starting with "X") and glucose-amended microcosms on day 31 (clones starting with "G")
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By using a polyphasic approach, we were able to demonstrate that despite the acute inhibitory effects of Pb and Cr on microbial carbon mineralization and net biomass accumulation, there were dynamic changes in the microbial communities. The dynamics are illustrated by the changes in 16S rRNA DGGE fingerprints (Fig. 5 to 7), increases in BPH4 and PHE gene copy numbers (Tables 1 and 2), and increases in culturable metal-resistant bacteria (Fig. 4). All of these changes must result from the proliferation of specific microbes under specific selective conditions.
The most striking conclusion regarding community-wide changes upon metal stress was that their nature was characteristic of the stimulatory carbon source rather than the specific metal added. Thus, glucose-amended microcosms experienced more sweeping replacements of community members in response to metal additions than did xylene-amended ones. The number of different organic substrates and metals tested was small; however, this result may reflect the distinction between cases where there are large numbers of organisms that might be recruited (glucose catabolizers) and those (xylene) where potential responders (and their levels of metal resistance) are more limited. The Cr(VI) levels were different for each substrate and were titrated to reduce catabolism by a predetermined value; the amount added to glucose microcosms to reduce activity in the glucose microcosms by 90% [4 mg g1of Cr(VI)] resulted in no metabolic activity in microcosms with xylene.
This experimental approach allowed us to identify some of the indigenous soil populations that responded to these conditions. Intense bands generally only occurred in 16S rRNA PCR-DGGE profiles for microcosms in which carbon mineralization occurred. We believe these intense bands correspond to organisms that have multiplied at the expense of the added organic substrate and are present as a significant fraction of the total population. This argument is strengthened by the significantly higher copy numbers of the catabolic BPH4 and PHE genes in the microcosms with xylene addition. Furthermore, xylene-degrading bacteria that were isolated from the microcosms contained BPH4 or PHE genes (Beasley et al., in preparation) and corresponded to intense bands in the community PCR-DGGE profiles. Other approaches, such as heavy isotope additions (29, 35), have been suggested as an approach to link populations responsible for functions in soil communities, but the approach used here is much simpler and less expensive and can be used on a broader scale in the field. The combination of PCR-DGGE of 16S rRNA genes with quantitative PCR of functional genes does have limitations because an individual band (organism) is not unequivocally linked to a specific function and because not all gene variants for specific catabolic functions are known. However, at the field scale, the correlation between stimulation of specific rRNA gene sequences and specific functional genes does provide a good initial basis to stimulate detailed analyses of the consequences of changes in community structure upon community function.
The phylogenetic identity of many of the bacteria selected under these conditions is consistent with in situ analyses of these (21a) and other metal-contaminated soils. The Actinomycetales have been reported to be important in metal-impacted soils (18). In cases where glucose only was added or xylene plus Cr(VI) was added, organisms from several genera of the Actinomycetales commonly responded to the stimuli.
Although the primary objective of this study was to analyze changes in community composition, activities were monitored to provide some basis for understanding community dynamics. In general, activity responses were similar to what has been observed in a number of other microcosm studies (8, 19, 37, 38). In the absence of metals, carbon additions stimulated increases in carbon mineralization, microbial biomass, and the number of culturable bacteria. Heavy metals generally suppressed these community responses, as lower carbon mineralization rates and longer lag phases were observed. On a molar basis, Cr was more toxic than Pb; this may reflect its greater mobility and bioavailability in soil (34). In addition, heavy metals inhibited the xylene-degrading community at lower concentrations than those required when glucose was the added energy source. As noted above, this difference may reflect the narrower pool of metal-tolerant species that could catabolize xylene than of those that could catabolize glucose.
A final physiological consequence of metal addition was the reduction in net biomass increases at the expense of added organic carbon. As noted above, growth dynamics were still present to produce changes in DGGE fingerprints, culturable bacterial numbers, and catabolic gene copies. However, the lack of biomass increase may also reflect an energy expenditure to implement metal tolerance, as is true in the case of ATP-dependent efflux systems (43). The ratio of mineralized to assimilated organic C was found to increase in other metal-contaminated soils (6), which is consistent with the increased energy expenditure under these conditions.
The BPH4-type biphenyl dioxygenase and PHE genes were routinely detected in control microcosms and most xylene-amended microcosms, rather than the xylene monooxygenase and toluate or benzoate dioxygenases usually associated with xylene metabolism (The University of Minnesota Biocatalysis/Biodegradation Database [http://umbbd.ahc.umn.edu/]). The presence of aromatic oxygenase genes in the control microcosms was not unexpected because the soil sample was taken from a site contaminated with aromatic hydrocarbons. BPH4 and PHE gene copies increased in xylene microcosms and corresponded to changes in CO2 evolution, and in some cases, biomass; this suggests that there was an enrichment of strains harboring these oxygenase genes. Phenol hydroxylase catalyzes the continued oxidation of hydroxylated intermediates in xylene and toluene catabolism (3) and has been detected in other xylene-amended-microcosm studies (B. Baldwin, personal communication). The selection of BPH4 oxygenase genes following the addition of xylenes may seem counterintuitive; however, previous reports have noted the sequence similarity and functional overlap of biphenyl and alkyl-benzene dioxygenases, including toluene dioxygenase (17, 44). The BPH4 subfamily of biphenyl dioxygenase genes, in particular, is closely related to isopropylbenzene dioxygenase genes.
Although Cr(VI) inhibits microbes, there are biotic and abiotic detoxification mechanisms in soil (4). One biotic mechanism (under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions) occurs via Cr(VI) reduction to less toxic and less mobile Cr(III) (14, 48). Cr(VI) reduction to nontoxic levels could have been a precondition for the onset of microbial activity in the microcosms. However, this was not the case in systems to which glucose was added; these could tolerate relatively large additions of Cr(VI), and microbes were mineralizing glucose when most of the Cr(VI) remained. In the case of xylene amendments, the relationship is less clear. Because only low levels of Cr(VI) could be added to retain any xylene degradation at all, even a modest rate of biological reduction resulted in very small residual Cr(VI) concentrations. Coupled with the lag in detectable xylene mineralization even in the absence of Cr(VI), these data do not convincingly show that xylene catabolism occurred while Cr(VI) was present. More sensitive analyses (for example, with radiotracers) would be required to resolve this issue.
Rarefaction analysis of a 16S rRNA gene clone library created from several soils at this site indicated that they contain a relatively low diversity of microbes (21a), and the provision of a single carbon source in microcosms produced a further reduction in diversity. These effects are explicable in light of the resource heterogeneity hypothesis (46), i.e., the site is relatively uniformly barren with respect to resource availability due to the lack of plant vegetation. As a result, heterotrophic productivity and diversity are low. The addition of a single C source to microcosms results in even lower organic resource heterogeneity, and there is strong selection for a few types that use that dominant C source. When an additional selection (heavy metals) factor was imposed, the community dynamics were found to be much greater for components expected to contain a large degree of functional redundancy (glucose-catabolizing bacteria) than a more restricted catabolic function (xylene degradation). Consistent with this broader capacity was the greater robustness of glucose catabolism, that is, it recovered and proceeded at much higher metal concentrations than did xylene catabolism.
We thank the Indiana Department of Transportation, and in particular Bill Jervis, for giving us access to the site, Judy Lindell for technical assistance, and Leon Toussaint and Joanne Becker for assisting in soil collection.
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