Overview
FrançaisABSTRACT
The new meta-omics techniques have upset the field of microbial ecology, particularly due to the contribution of the new high-throughput sequencing technologies. This revolution has benefited from fundamental research point of view but also by giving access to tools dedicated to new measurements and to carry out soil microbial quality diagnosis. What are the bio-indicators used? How are they studied and applied on a large scale? This article will be focused on the different meta-omic techniques illustrated by valid or undergoing validation examples, as well as future developments in order to answer the essential challenge of a better understanding and preservation of the soil.
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Read the articleAUTHORS
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Christophe DJEMIEL: Post-doctoral fellow at INRA Dijon, PhD in environmental and population biology and ecology from the University of Lille. - UMR 1347 Agroecology – INRA/Université de Bourgogne/AgroSup, BIOmE pole – BIOCOM team, Dijon, France
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Sébastien TERRAT: Lecturer at the Dijon-Auxerre Institute of Technology, PhD in soil microbial ecology from Blaise Pascal University (Clermont II). - UMR 1347 Agroecology – INRA/Université de Bourgogne/AgroSup, BIOmE pole – BIOCOM team, Dijon, France
INTRODUCTION
Over the past two decades, microbial ecology has not escaped the data explosion known as "Big Data", due in particular to the emergence of very high-throughput sequencing techniques, generating massive quantities of data. . The use of these new technologies, grouped together under the term "meta-omics", combined with the ability to obtain biological material (DNA, RNA, proteins) directly from an ecosystem, have made it possible to understand the ecosystem not at the scale of a single organism ("omics" methods), but by characterizing all the communities of organisms in an ecosystem. . This revolution has increased our knowledge of the complexity of the microbiome of various natural ecosystems, such as soils .
Soils play a central role in many functions, and their microbiomes provide numerous ecosystem services to maintain environmental quality, all of which are impacted by human activities. . For example, soil micro-organisms are involved in numerous biogeochemical cycles, but also in other functions such as plant productivity or pathogen barrier. In addition, it has been possible to identify a series of factors (e.g. anthropization, climate disruption) involved in changing soil quality, and consequently its microbiome.
This is why soil quality is not limited to the degree of pollution, as it is for water and air. It is defined more broadly as "the ability of a soil to function within the limits of its ecosystem and land use to maintain biological productivity, sustain environmental quality and promote plant and animal health".
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KEYWORDS
Microbiology | Next generation sequencing | meta-omics | diagnosis | bioindicator | soil
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New meta-omics techniques for diagnosing soil microbiological quality
Bibliography
Websites
ISO standards : http://www.iso.org/committee/54366/x/catalogue/
AgrInnov project : http://revue-sesame-inra.fr/agrinnov-reva-un-reseau-pour-experimenter-de-bonnes-pratiques-agricoles-3/
...Standards and norms
- Soil quality – Sampling – Part 1: Guidelines for establishing sampling programs. - ISO 10381-1 - 2002
- Soil quality – Method for directly extracting DNA from soil samples. - ISO 11063 - 2012
- Soil quality – Estimation of microbial gene sequence abundance by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification from DNA extracted directly from soil. - ISO 17601 - 2016
Directory
Manufacturers – Suppliers – Distributors (non-exhaustive list)
Agrosolutions : http://www.agrosolutions.com/
Ambion (distributed by ThermoFisher) : http://www.thermofisher.com/fr/fr/home/brands/invitrogen/ambion/ambion-product-list.html
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