Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://digitalrepository.fccollege.edu.pk/handle/123456789/1963
Title: Microbial activity, community composition and degraders in the glyphosate-spiked soil are driven by glycine formation
Authors: Aslam, Sohaib
Muhammad, Arslan
M. Nowak, Karolina
Keywords: Sarcosine Glycine AMPA ( 13C)-PLFAs DNA Metabarcoding
Issue Date: 27-Oct-2023
Publisher: Elsevier
Citation: Aslam, Sohaib, Muhammad Arslan, and Karolina M. Nowak. "Microbial activity, community composition and degraders in the glyphosate-spiked soil are driven by glycine formation." Science of The Total Environment 907 (2024): 168206.
Abstract: Widely-used glyphosate may produce aminomethylphosphonic acid (AMPA), glycine and sarcosine. To date, little is known about effects of these degradation products on soil microorganisms and their potential degraders. Here, we incubated a soil spiked either with 2-13C-glyphosate, 13C-AMPA, 13C3-sarcosine or 13C2-glycine for 75 days. Respiration (CO2 tot) and mineralization rates of the compound ( 13CO2) were estimated in addition to phospholipid fatty acids (PLFAstot and 13C-PLFAs) as biomarkers to identify four groups of microorganisms (Gram-negative & Gram-positive bacteria, actinobacteria, fungi). 16S/ITS rRNA amplicon sequencing was also conducted to identify the microbial community at the phylum and genus level. The CO2 tot and 13CO2 rates were highest on day 2 in all treatments, as follows: glycine (CO2 tot: 1.09 μmol g− 1 ; 13CO2: 18 %) > sarcosine (CO2 tot: 0.89 μmol g− 1 ; 13CO2: 8.5 %) > glyphosate (CO2 tot: 0.67 μmol g− 1 ; 13CO2: 2.2 %) > AMPA (CO2 tot: 0.53 μmol g− 1 ; 13CO2: 0.3 %). Both the PLFAstot and 13C-PLFAs were highest in glycine (PLFAstot: 0.054–0.047 μmol g− 1 ; 13C-PLFAs: 0.2–0.4 %) and glyphosate (PLFAstot: 0.049–0.047 μmol g− 1 ; 13C-PLFAs: 0.1–0.3 %) treatments compared to sarcosine and AMPA treatments. Gram negative bacteria were major microbial group of soil microbiome as well as primary degraders of all compounds. In contrast, Gram-positive bacteria, actinobacteria and fungi could have been consumers of primary degraders. Certain genera e.g. Gemmatimonas, Arenimonas and Massilia showed increased abundance in certain treatments indicating their potential involvement in biodegradation. Based on similar time-dependent microbial activity and shifts in abundances of ( 13C-)PLFAs and 16S rRNA genera, we deduced that glyphosate was mainly degraded to glycine, and presumably at elevated amounts. We reported for the first time that the glycine presumably altered microbial activity and community composition rather than glyphosate directly. Future studies should thus also consider the potential impacts of degradation products of the parent compound on soil microbiomes.
URI: http://10.12.5.105:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/1963
Appears in Collections:Environmental Science Department

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Aslam et al., 2024_STOTEN-sarc-plfa.pdf5.28 MBAdobe PDFView/Open


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.