Aberystwyth Cadair Online Research Repository WRN Partners / Partneriaid RhCC
???jsp.layout.header-default.alt???
  •  
  • Home
  • Departments
  • Issue Date
  • Author
  • Title

 
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2160/3164

Title: 
The rapid assignment of ruminal fungi to presumptive genera using ITS1 and ITS2RNA secondary structures to produce group specific fingerprints
Authors: Tuckwell, D. S.
Nicholson, Matthew J.
McSweeney, C. S.
Theodorou, Mike K.
Brookman, Jayne L.
Issue Date: 2005
Publisher: 
Society for General Microbiology
Citation: 
Tuckwell, D. S., Nicholson, M. J., McSweeney, C. S., Theodorou, M. K., Brookman, J. L.(2005). The rapid assignment of ruminal fungi to presumptive genera using ITS1 and ITS2RNA secondary structures to produce group specific fingerprints. Microbiology, 151, (5), 1557-1567.
Referenced By: 
Abstract: 
Identification of microbial community members in complex environmental samples is time consuming and repetitive. Here, ribosomal sequences and hidden Markov models are used in a novel approach to rapidly assign fungi to their presumptive genera. The ITS1 and ITS2 fragments from a range of axenic, anaerobic gut fungal cultures, including several type strains, were isolated and the RNA secondary structures predicted for these sequences were used to generate a fingerprinting program. The methodology was then tested and the algorithms improved using a collection of environmentally derived sequences, providing a rapid indicator of the fungal diversity and numbers of novel sequence groups within the environmental sample from which they were derived. While the methodology was developed to assist in investigations involving the rumen ecosystem, it has potential generic application in studying diversity and population dynamics in other microbial ecosystems.
URI: 
Sponsor: 
BBSRC
Appears in Collections:IBERS Research papers

Files in This Item:

There are no files associated with this item.

All items in CADAIR are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved.
No item in CADAIR may be reproduced for commercial purposes.
For other possible restrictions on use please refer to the publisher's URL
where this is made available, or to notes contained in the item itself.
If you believe that any material held on CADAIR infringes copyright, please contact abuse@aber.ac.uk
providing details and we will remove the work from the repository and investigate your claim.

 
Feedback     Copyright © 2009 Aberystwyth University