Turnover of extracellular DNA in eutrophic and oligotrophic freshwater environments of southwest Florida
JH Paul, WH Jeffrey, AW David… - Applied and …, 1989 - Am Soc Microbiol
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 1989•Am Soc Microbiol
The turnover of extracellular DNA was investigated in oligotrophic springs of the Crystal
River and the eutrophic Medard Reservoir of southwest Florida. The Medard Reservoir
possessed large populations of bacterioplankton and phytoplankton (6.8× 109 cells per liter
and 28.6 μg of chlorophyll a per liter, respectively), while the Crystal River springs only
contained a fraction of the microbial biomass found in the Medard Reservoir. Although
dissolved DNA values were greater in the Medard Reservoir, higher rates of DNA removal …
River and the eutrophic Medard Reservoir of southwest Florida. The Medard Reservoir
possessed large populations of bacterioplankton and phytoplankton (6.8× 109 cells per liter
and 28.6 μg of chlorophyll a per liter, respectively), while the Crystal River springs only
contained a fraction of the microbial biomass found in the Medard Reservoir. Although
dissolved DNA values were greater in the Medard Reservoir, higher rates of DNA removal …
The turnover of extracellular DNA was investigated in oligotrophic springs of the Crystal River and the eutrophic Medard Reservoir of southwest Florida. The Medard Reservoir possessed large populations of bacterioplankton and phytoplankton (6.8 × 109 cells per liter and 28.6 μg of chlorophyll a per liter, respectively), while the Crystal River springs only contained a fraction of the microbial biomass found in the Medard Reservoir. Although dissolved DNA values were greater in the Medard Reservoir, higher rates of DNA removal resulted in similar extracellular DNA turnover times in both environments (9.62 ± 3.6 h in the Crystal River and 10.5 ± 2.1 h in the Medard Reservoir). These results indicate that regardless of trophic status or microbial standing stock, extracellular DNA turns over rapidly in subtropical planktonic freshwater environments. Therefore, recombinant DNA sequences from released genetically engineered microorganisms might not be expected to survive for long periods of time in freshwater planktonic environments.
American Society for Microbiology
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