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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Aug 1997, 3176-3181, Vol 63, No. 8
E Jaspers and J Overmann
A simple isoelectric focusing (IEF) method for whole bacterial cells was
developed. In a pH gradient of 2 to 10 and an electric field of 11.5 V
cm-1, mixtures of cells from the three different bacterial strains
Chlorobium limicola 6230, Pseudomonas stutzeri DSM 50227, and Micrococcus
luteus DSM 20030 could be separated. A density gradient of Ficoll prevented
convective currents in the system. The method was tested with a
concentrated mixture of bacteria from a shallow eutrophic lake and yielded
up to 10 different bands. Species composition in each IEF band was analyzed
by PCR plus denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE). Each IEF band
exhibited a different species composition. After the separation of cells by
IEF three times more 16S ribosomal DNA signals could be detected by DGGE
than in the unfractionated natural bacterial community. It is concluded
that the resolution of these molecular biological methods is significantly
enhanced if cells are first separated by IEF. At the same time, the IEF
fractions are enriched for certain species, which can be used in subsequent
cultivation experiments.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Separation of bacterial cells by isoelectric focusing, a new method for analysis of complex microbial communities
Institut fur Chemie und Biologie des Meeres, Universitat Oldenburg, Germany.
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