4.7 Article

Quantitative soil zymography: Mechanisms, processes of substrate and enzyme diffusion in porous media

Journal

SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 127, Issue -, Pages 156-167

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2018.09.030

Keywords

In situ 2D zymography; Soil enzyme activity; Microbial hotspot's localization; Diffusion processes

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation's Long-Term Ecological Research Program [DEB 1027253]
  2. National Science Foundation's Geobiology and Low Temperature Geochemistry Program [1630399]
  3. Department of Energy Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center (DOE O_ce of Science) [BER DE-FC02-07ER64494]
  4. Michigan State University's AgBioResearch (Project GREEEN)
  5. Michigan State University's Discretionary Funding Initiative
  6. DAAD-German Academic Exchange Service' program Research Stays for University Academics and Scientists, 2017 [57314018]
  7. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  8. DFG [403670038, 403664478, 2089]

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Soil membrane zymography enables 2D mapping of enzyme activities on the surface of soil samples. The method is based on diffusion of components of enzymatically-mediated reactions to/from membrane, and, thus, reflects the distribution of enzyme activities at the intact soil surface. Zymography has been already successfully implemented in numerous soil ecology applications. Here we identify two methodological aspects for further improvement and expansion of the method at micro and macro scales: first, accounting for the area of contact between the soil surface and the zymography membranes and, second, accounting for diffusion effects during the zymography procedure. We tested three methods, namely, laser-scanning, staining with a fluorescent product (e.g. MUF: 4-methylumbelliferone), and X-ray computed micro-tomography, for assessing the area of the soil surface in contact with the membranes. We quantified diffusion of MUF, enzymes and substrate between the substrate-saturated membrane and soil as well as diffusion processes during membrane zymography via HP2 software. Diffusion of the substrate from the membrane and of the MUF-product to the membrane was detected, while there were no clear evidence of enzyme diffusion to/in the membrane. According to the model simulations, the enzyme activities detected via 2D zymography probably represent only a small portion, about 20%, of the actual reactions within the soil volume that is in both direct contact and in hydrological contact with zymography membranes. This is a result of omnidirectional diffusion of reaction products. The membrane contact with the soil surface estimated by three methods ranged from 3.4 to 36.5% further signifying that only a fraction of enzymes activity is detectable in a course of 2D soil zymography.

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