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Influence of Substrate Concentration on the Culturability of Heterotrophic Soil Microbes Isolated by High-Throughput Dilution-to-Extinction Cultivation

Ryan P. Bartelme, Joy M. Custer, Christopher L. Dupont, Josh L. Espinoza, Manolito Torralba, Banafshe Khalili, Paul Carini

2020mSphere56 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Isolating environmental microbes and studying their physiology under controlled conditions are essential aspects of understanding their ecology. Subsurface ecosystems are typically nutrient-poor environments that harbor diverse microbial communities-the majority of which are thus far uncultured. In this study, we use modified high-throughput cultivation methods to isolate subsurface soil microbes. We show that a component of whether a microbe is culturable from subsurface soils is the concentration of growth substrates in the culture medium. Our results offer new insight into technical approaches and growth medium design that can be used to access the uncultured diversity of soil microbes.

Topics & Concepts

DilutionHeterotrophSubstrate (aquarium)Extinction (optical mineralogy)Environmental scienceEnvironmental chemistryChemistryEcologyBiologyBacteriaMineralogyPhysicsGeneticsThermodynamicsMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyBiocrusts and Microbial EcologyGut microbiota and health
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