Abstract

AbstractPolymerase chain reaction (PCR)‐based ‘fingerprinting’ methods, such as Terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism, Length Heterogeneity‐Polymerase Chain Reaction (LH‐PCR) and Automated Ribosomal Intergenic Spacer Analysis (ARISA) make possible quantitative studies of microbial community structure and dynamics. Here we outline a strategy for the rapid and cost‐effective isolation of 16S clones corresponding to particular fragment sizes in a fingerprint, based on applying the fingerprinting method to pools of colonies from a clone library. This allows the definitive identification of taxa responsible for the most important bands in the community fingerprint from a full 16S sequence. It offers significant advantages over random selection of clones and removes a significant barrier to the use of these methods.

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