home > biosample > SAMD00009388
identifier SAMD00009388
type biosample
sameAs
sra-sample  DRS012084
organism phyllosphere metagenome
attributes
sample_name  DRS012084
ATGCGC  3rdFNNB
CACGTA  3rdANNB
CGTGTC  3rdFLNB
CACATG  3rdANNB
CGCGAC  3rdFLNB
CTACGT  3rdFLNB
CTAGCG  3rdALNB
CTATCG  3rdALNB
AGTCGC  3rdFNNB
CTAGAC  3rdALNB
sample comment  The phyllosphere, the leaf surface of terrestrial plants, represents the largest biological interface on earth. This habitat is colonized by diverse microorganisms that affect plant health and growth. Not only their identity of these phyllosphere microorganisms, but in particular their responses to rising atmospheric CO2 concentration is poorly understood. Using a massive parallel pyrosequencing technique, we investigated the response of phyllosphere bacterial community in rice to elevated CO2 (eCO2) at tillering, filling, and maturation stages in a rice field under different level of nitrogen fertilization. Our analyses revealed 9 406 distinct OTUs (operational taxonomic units) that could be classified into 8 phyla, 13 classes, 26 orders, 59 families and 120 genera. The family Enterobacteriaceae of Gammaproteobacteria was the most dominant phylotype during rice growing seasons tested, accounting for 60.9-97.2% of the total microbial communities. eCO2 showed the trend of stimulating the relative abundance of dominant phylotype from 60.9-89.4% at aCO2 (ambient CO2) to 66.7-97.2% at eCO2 at all rice growing stages, but suppressing the overall rare phylotypes such as Moraxellaceae, Xanthomonadaceae, Pseudomonadaceae, Bacillaceae, Microbacteriaceae, Sphingobacteriaceae, Flavobacteriaceae, and Comamonadaceae from 6.56-33.6% at aCO2 to 1.31-25.0% at eCO2 in most cases. This contrasting response pattern was largely consistent at all growing stages tested and appeared to be insensitive to nitrogen fertilizations. Furthermore, eCO2 illustrated the trend of enhancing phyllosphere bacterial diversity at rice tillering and filling stages, while the opposite trend was observed at maturing stage. The results of this study provide a novel conceptual framework for moving toward a mechanistic understanding of phyllosphere bacterial responses to global climate changes.
CACTAG  3rdANNB
ATATGA  3rdFNNB
properties 
{...}
dbXrefs
bioproject  PRJDB2228
sra-run  DRR013712
sra-submission  DRA001097
sra-study  DRP001146
sra-sample  DRS012084
sra-experiment  DRX012267
distribution JSONJSON-LD
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status public
visibility unrestricted-access
dateCreated 2014-05-12T01:17:49+09:00
dateModified 2014-11-12T08:28:28+09:00
datePublished 2014-06-30T15:00:00+09:00