Terminal Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism Data Analysis for Quantitative Comparison of Microbial Communities
- 1 February 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Applied and Environmental Microbiology
- Vol. 69 (2) , 926-932
- https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.69.2.926-932.2003
Abstract
Terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) is a culture-independent method of obtaining a genetic fingerprint of the composition of a microbial community. Comparisons of the utility of different methods of (i) including peaks, (ii) computing the difference (or distance) between profiles, and (iii) performing statistical analysis were made by using replicated profiles of eubacterial communities. These samples included soil collected from three regions of the United States, soil fractions derived from three agronomic field treatments, soil samples taken from within one meter of each other in an alfalfa field, and replicate laboratory bioreactors. Cluster analysis by Ward9s method and by the unweighted-pair group method using arithmetic averages (UPGMA) were compared. Ward9s method was more effective at differentiating major groups within sets of profiles; UPGMA had a slightly reduced error rate in clustering of replicate profiles and was more sensitive to outliers. Most replicate profiles were clustered together when relative peak height or Hellinger-transformed peak height was used, in contrast to raw peak height. Redundancy analysis was more effective than cluster analysis at detecting differences between similar samples. Redundancy analysis using Hellinger distance was more sensitive than that using Euclidean distance between relative peak height profiles. Analysis of Jaccard distance between profiles, which considers only the presence or absence of a terminal restriction fragment, was the most sensitive in redundancy analysis, and was equally sensitive in cluster analysis, if all profiles had cumulative peak heights greater than 10,000 fluorescence units. It is concluded that T-RFLP is a sensitive method of differentiating between microbial communities when the optimal statistical method is used for the situation at hand. It is recommended that hypothesis testing be performed by redundancy analysis of Hellinger-transformed data and that exploratory data analysis be performed by cluster analysis using Ward9s method to find natural groups or by UPGMA to identify potential outliers. Analyses can also be based on Jaccard distance if all profiles have cumulative peak heights greater than 10,000 fluorescence units.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ecologically meaningful transformations for ordination of species dataOecologia, 2001
- Phylogenetic Specificity and Reproducibility and New Method for Analysis of Terminal Restriction Fragment Profiles of 16S rRNA Genes from Bacterial CommunitiesApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2001
- Soil Community Analysis Using DGGE of 16S rDNA Polymerase Chain Reaction ProductsSoil Science Society of America Journal, 2000
- Effect of soil aggregate size on methanogenesis and archaeal community structure in anoxic rice field soilFEMS Microbiology Ecology, 2000
- Use of the T-RFLP technique to assess spatial and temporal changes in the bacterial community structure within an agricultural soil planted with transgenic and non-transgenic potato plantsFEMS Microbiology Ecology, 2000
- Opening the black box of soil microbial diversityApplied Soil Ecology, 1999
- DISTANCE-BASED REDUNDANCY ANALYSIS: TESTING MULTISPECIES RESPONSES IN MULTIFACTORIAL ECOLOGICAL EXPERIMENTSEcological Monographs, 1999
- Soil Resources, Microbial Activity, and Primary Production Across an Agricultural EcosystemEcological Applications, 1997
- Bacterial community fingerprinting of amplified 16S and 16–23S ribosomal DNA gene sequences and restriction endonuclease analysis(ARDRA)Published by Springer Nature ,1995
- Ribosomal RNA Analysis of Microorganisms as They Occur in NaturePublished by Springer Nature ,1992