Abstract

To determine the optimal soil sample size for microbial community structure analysis, DNA extraction, microbial composition analysis, and diversity assessments were performed using soil sample sizes of 0.2, 1, and 5 g. This study focused on the relationship between soil amount and DNA extraction container volume and the alteration in microbial composition at different taxonomic ranks (order, class, and phylum). Horizontal (0.2 and 1 g) and vertical (5 g) shaking were applied during DNA extraction for practical use in a small laboratory. In the case of the 5 g soil sample, DNA extraction efficiency and the value of α-diversity index fluctuated severely, possibly because of vertical shaking. Regarding the 0.2 and 1 g soil samples, the number of taxa, Shannon-Wiener index, and Bray-Curtis dissimilarity were stable and had approximately the same values at each taxonomic rank. However, non-metric multidimensional scaling showed that the microbial compositions of these two sample sizes were different. The higher relative abundance of taxa in the case of the 0.2 g soil sample might indicate that cell wall compositions differentiated the microbial community structures in these two sample sizes due to high shear stress tolerance. The soil sample size and tube volume affected the estimated microbial community structure. A soil sample size of 0.2 g would be preferable to the other sample sizes because of the possible higher shearing force for DNA extraction and lower experimental costs due to smaller amounts of consumables. When the taxonomic rank was changed from order to phylum, some minor taxa identified at the order rank were integrated into major taxa at the phylum rank. The integration affected the value of the β-diversity index; therefore, the microbial community structure analysis, reproducibility of structures, diversity assessment, and detection of minor taxa would be influenced by the taxonomic rank applied.

Highlights

  • The soil environment possesses abundant microorganisms with 1010–1011 bacteria and 6,000– 50,000 species present in 1 g of soil [1]

  • DNA extraction efficiency should not change with a change in soil sample size

  • We focused on the relationship between the soil amount and the extraction container volume in DNA extraction, and the differences in microbial community structure between two soil sample sizes (0.2 g and 1 g) at different taxonomic ranks

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Summary

Introduction

The soil environment possesses abundant microorganisms with 1010–1011 bacteria and 6,000– 50,000 species present in 1 g of soil [1]. Microbial composition and diversity in the soil environment interact with various biotic and abiotic factors [2]. Soil microorganisms are not uniformly distributed because of the physical and chemical characteristics of the environment. Nunan et al [3] indicated that the occurrence of different bacterial distributions. The effect of soil sample size on soil microbial diversity in different taxonomic ranks. Taro Yamauchi) at Research Institute for Humanity and Nature (RIHN, Project No 14200107). The funder had no role in study design, data collection, analysis, decision to publish, nor preparation of the manuscript

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