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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, November 1998, p. 4522-4529, Vol. 64, No. 11
College of Oceanic and Atmospheric
Sciences1 and
Department of
Microbiology,2 Oregon State University,
Corvallis, Oregon 97331
Received 26 March 1998/Accepted 9 September 1998
Marine bacterioplankton diversity was examined by quantifying
natural length variation in the 5' domain of small-subunit (SSU) rRNA
genes (rDNA) amplified by PCR from a DNA sample from the Oregon coast.
This new technique, length heterogeneity analysis by PCR (LH-PCR),
determines the relative proportions of amplicons originating from
different organisms by measuring the fluorescence emission of a labeled
primer used in the amplification reaction. Relationships between the
sizes of amplicons and gene phylogeny were predicted by an analysis of
366 SSU rDNA sequences from cultivated marine bacteria and from
bacterial genes cloned directly from environmental samples. LH-PCR was
used to compare the distribution of bacterioplankton SSU rDNAs from a
coastal water sample with that of an SSU rDNA clone library prepared
from the same sample and also to examine the distribution of genes in
the PCR products from which the clone library was prepared. The
analysis revealed that the relative frequencies of genes amplified from
natural communities are highly reproducible for replicate sets of PCRs but that a bias possibly caused by the reannealing kinetics of product
molecules can skew gene frequencies when PCR product concentrations exceed threshold values.
0099-2240/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Kinetic Bias in Estimates of Coastal Picoplankton Community
Structure Obtained by Measurements of Small-Subunit rRNA Gene PCR
Amplicon Length Heterogeneity

and
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331. Phone: (541) 737-1835. Fax: (541) 737-0496. E-mail:
giovanns{at}bcc.orst.edu.
Present address: Monterey Bay Aquarium Research
Institute, Moss Landing, CA 95010.
Present address: Station Biologique, CNRS, INSU et
Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Roscoff Cedex, France.
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