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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, August 2006, p. 5659-5661, Vol. 72, No. 8
0099-2240/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.01057-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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Ian R. Beadle,2,
Paul Humphreys,2,
and
Alan J. McCarthy1*
School of Biological Sciences, Biosciences Building, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 7ZB, United Kingdom,1 Environmental Assessments, BNFL, Risley, Warrington WA3 6AS, United Kingdom2
Received 8 May 2006/ Accepted 9 June 2006
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There is no shortage of environments other than the herbivore gut where cellulose is degraded under anaerobic conditions, and landfill sites in particular could contain active populations. The aim of the study reported here was to design oligonucleotide PCR primers that could specifically amplify the 18S rRNA gene of members of the Neocallimastigales and to use the data to demonstrate their occurrence in those landfill sites in which cellulose degradation is proceeding under anaerobic conditions. Apart from the difficulties of isolating and cultivating anaerobic fungi, the paucity of information on their occurrence outside the rumen could also be due to competition with large populations of cellulolytic anaerobic bacteria, such as those that predominate in landfill sites (11). In the rumen, anaerobic fungi are heavily outnumbered by bacteria (7) but have a high specific activity against cellulose and therefore make a very significant contribution to its degradation (1). This could also apply to landfill sites, and detection sensitivity can be improved by employing a nested PCR protocol analogous to that used for monitoring populations of sulfate-reducing bacteria in landfill sites (5).
Two sites were used as the source of samples for DNA extraction. The Drigg site is the United Kingdom's principal facility for the disposal of solid low-level radioactive waste. Historically, untreated waste was tumble tipped into a series of trenches cut into the local geostrata, with a natural low permeability layer forming the base (6). The waste came in a variety of forms, including rubble, spoil, redundant equipment, scrap, and process waste, and typically contained significant amounts of metallic and cellulosic materials. A series of open "gas vents" have been driven into the waste and consist of a hollow tube with a perforated sidewall to facilitate gas migration and allow sampling of leachate and monitoring of water levels. Samples of a sediment/leachate mix were recovered from the bottoms of 71 gas vent pipes from across the site. The second site (Brogborough) comprised test cells initiated by the United Kingdom Department of Energy to demonstrate several easily applied techniques for accelerating landfill gas production. Each 20-m-deep cell accommodated 15,000 tons of waste, at a density of 1 metric ton m3 (4). Prior to final closure of the site, a leachate sample (1 liter) was obtained from each of the six test cells. The leachate samples were then concentrated by centrifugation (14,000 x g for 30 min) before subsequent DNA extraction from the pelleted material. Bovine rumen fluid was used as a control sample known to contain anaerobic fungi. Total genomic DNA was isolated from all samples by use of a Bio101 FastDNA spin kit for soil (Anachem, United Kingdom). In some cases, the extracted DNA was not sufficiently pure for further applications and required processing via the Wizard DNA cleanup system (Promega).
The initial PCR (annealing temperature, 50°C) was carried out using primer NS1-eukaryotic (5'-CCAGTAGTCATATGCTTGTC-3') (12) and reverse primer Univ-1390-universal (5'-GACGGGCGGTGTGTACAA-3') (14). The second round of amplification was carried out using an internal primer set (annealing temperature, 60°C) consisting of Neocal-forward (5'-GCACTTCATTGTGTGTACTG-3') and Neocal-reverse (5'-GGATGAAACTCGTTGACTTC-3'), designed in this study to be specific for members of the Neocallimastigales. Specificity was established using the "search for short, nearly exact matches" function at the National Centre for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) website. Amplification products of the expected size (787 bp) were obtained from DNA extracts of Neocallimastix frontalis and rumen fluid but not from DNA extracts of three nontarget fungal species (Fig. 1). Neocallimastigales DNA was detected in 34 of the 71 samples retrieved from the gas vents at Drigg, by application of this nested PCR procedure (see Fig. 2). Drigg is an unusual landfill site in that biological activity is very low due to the absence of putrescible waste, and the limited amounts of carbon dioxide and methane detectable (6) almost certainly have their origin in cellulose degradation. This, together with the absence of any inputs that could contain anaerobic gut fungi, suggests that the data in Fig. 2 show the presence of an indigenous population of fungi that belong to the Neocallimastigales. This link between the detection of Neocallimastigales DNA and the presence of an active population of cellulose-degrading fungi receives further support from the analysis of Brogborough test cell samples. Only one of the six test cell DNA extracts could be amplified with the Neocallimastigales specific PCR primers (data not shown), and that test cell had been used to study the effect of excessive loading of cellulose, in the form of paper and cardboard.
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FIG. 1. PCR amplification products of the 18S rRNA gene obtained after amplification using different primer sets. (a) Primers NS1-Euk and Univ-1390, designed to target the eukaryotic18S rRNA gene. These products were subsequently diluted and used as a template in the following amplification reaction. (b) Primers Neocal-forward and Neocal-reverse, designed to target the Neocallimastigales 18S rRNA gene. Lane 1, GeneRuler 100-bp DNA Ladder Plus (MBI Fermentas); lane 2, Neocallimastix frontalis; lane 3, Rhizopus stolonifera; lane 4, Saccharomyces cerevisiae; lane 5, Cunninghamella elegans; lane 6, bovine rumen fluid.
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FIG. 2. 18S rRNA PCR amplification products obtained from landfill sites. Lane 1, GeneRuler 100-bp DNA Ladder Plus (MBI Fermentas); lane 2, Neocallimastix frontalis; lane 3, Rhizopus stolonifera; lane 4, dH2O; lanes 5 to 9, samples taken from five of the Drigg gas vent pipes.
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FIG. 3. A maximum likelihood tree showing the relatedness of environmentally derived clones (GenBank accession numbers DQ449579 to DQ449598) and database sequences of cultivated members of the Neocallimastigales. Clones BNFL 01 to BNFL 10 are from the Drigg landfill site, clones Brog 01 to Brog 05 are from the Brogborough landfill test cell, and clones Rumen 01 to Rumen 05 are from bovine rumen. The tree is rooted with another order of the same phylum, the Monoblepharidales.
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Present address: Department of Civil Engineering, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 3G1. ![]()
Present address: AMEC Earth and Environmental Services, Sankey House, 130, Birchwood Blvd., Warrington WA3 7QH, United Kingdom. ![]()
Present address: School of Geography and Earth Sciences, University of Huddersfield, Queensgate, Huddersfield HD1 3DH, United Kingdom. ![]()
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