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Cultivating the bacterial microbiota of populus roots

Published in:

mSystems 6(3) ( 2021)

Author(s):

Carper, D. L., Weston, D. J., Barde, A., Timm, C. M., Lu, T. Y., Burdick, L. H., Jawdy, S. S., Klingeman, D. M., Robeson, M. S., Veach, A. M., Cregger, M. A., Kalluri, U. C., Schadt, C. W., Podar, M., Doktycz, M. J., Pelletier, D. A.

DOI:

10.1128/mSystems.01306-20

Abstract:

The integral role of microbial communities in plant growth and health is now widely recognized, and, increasingly, the constituents of the microbiome are being defined. While phylogenetic surveys have revealed the taxa present in a microbiome and show that this composition can depend on, and respond to, environmental perturbations, the challenge shifts to determining why particular microbes are selected and how they collectively function in concert with their host. In this study, we targeted the isolation of representative bacterial strains from environmental samples of Populus roots using a direct plating approach and compared them to amplicon-based sequencing analysis of root samples. The resulting culture collection contains 3,211 unique isolates representing 10 classes, 18 orders, 45 families, and 120 genera from 6 phyla, based on 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis. The collection accounts for

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