Assessment of soil fungal communities using pyrosequencing

Young Woon Lim, Byung Kwon Kim, Changmu Kim, Hack Sung Jung, Bong Soo Kim, Jae Hak Lee, Jongsik Chun

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

111 Scopus citations

Abstract

Pyrosequencing, a non-electrophoretic method of DNA sequencing, was used to investigate the extensive fungal community in soils of three islands in the Yellow Sea of Korea, between Korea and China. Pyrosequencing was carried out on amplicons derived from the 5′ region of 18S rDNA. A total of 10,166 reads were obtained, with an average length of 103 bp. The maximum number of fungal phylotypes in soil predicted at 99% similarity was 3,334. The maximum numbers of phylotypes predicted at 97% and 95% similarities were 736 and 286, respectively. Through phylogenetic assignment using BLASTN, a total of 372 tentative taxa were identified. The majority of true fungal sequences recovered in this study belonged to the Ascomycota (182 tentative taxa in 2,708 reads) and Basidiomycota (172 tentative taxa in 6,837 reads). The predominant species of Ascomycota detected have been described as lichen-forming fungi, litter/wood decomposers, plant parasites, endophytes, and saprotrophs: Peltigera neopolydactyla (Lecanoromycetes), Paecilomyces sp. (Sordariomycetes), Phacopsis huuskonenii (Lecanoromycetes), and Raffaelea hennebertii (mitosporicAscomycota). The majority of sequences in the Basidiomycota matched ectomycorrhizal and wood rotting fungi, including species of the Agaricales and Aphyllophorales, respectively. A high number of sequences in the Thelephorales, Boletales, Stereales, Hymenochaetales, and Ceratobasidiomycetes were also detected. By applying high-throughput pyrosequencing, we observed a high diversity of soil fungi and found evidence that pyrosequencing is a reliable technique for investigating fungal communities in soils.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)284-289
Number of pages6
JournalJournal of Microbiology
Volume48
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 2010

Keywords

  • 18S rDNA
  • Fungal diversity
  • Pyrosequencing
  • Soil fungi

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Assessment of soil fungal communities using pyrosequencing'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this