Molecular genetic analysis of the response of three soil microbial communities to the application of 2,4-D
- PMID: 7711953
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294x.1995.tb00188.x
Molecular genetic analysis of the response of three soil microbial communities to the application of 2,4-D
Abstract
The responses of three different soil microbial communities to the experimental application of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) were evaluated with a variety of molecular genetic techniques. Two of the three soil communities had histories of prior direct exposure to 2,4-D, and one had no prior direct application of any herbicide. Dominant 2,4-D degrading strains isolated from these soils the previous year were screened for hybridization with three catabolic genes (tfdA, tfdAII, and tfdB) cloned from the well-studied 2,4-D degradative plasmid, pJP4, revealing varying degrees of similarity with the three genes. Hybridization of total community DNA from the three soils with the tfd gene probes also indicated that pJP4-like tfd genes were not harboured by a significant percentage of the community. Community level response was evaluated by the comparison of different treatments by Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) fingerprints and by community DNA cross-hybridization. No differences between treatments within the same soil were detected in any of the RAPD fingerprints generated with 17 primers. Community DNA cross-hybridization also indicated that the application of 2,4-D at the applied rates did not quantitatively affect the structure of the soil microbial communities present in the three soils during the time-frame studied.
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