Metabolic dynamics analysis by massive data integration:
application to tsunami-affected field soils in Japan
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Abstract
A new metabolic dynamics
analysis approach has been developed in
which massive data sets from time-series of <sup>1</sup>H and <sup>13</sup>C NMR spectra are integrated in combination with microbial
variability to characterize the biomass degradation process using
field soil microbial communities. On the basis of correlation analyses
that revealed relationships between various metabolites and bacteria,
we efficiently monitored the metabolic dynamics of saccharides, amino
acids, and organic acids, by assessing time-course changes in the
microbial and metabolic profiles during biomass degradation. Specific
bacteria were found to support specific steps of metabolic pathways
in the degradation process of biomass to short chain fatty acids.
We evaluated samples from agricultural and abandoned fields contaminated
by the tsunami that followed the Great East earthquake in Japan. Metabolic
dynamics and activities in the biomass degradation process differed
considerably between soil from agricultural and abandoned fields.
In particular, production levels of short chain fatty acids, such
as acetate and propionate, which were considered to be produced by
soil bacteria such as <i>Sedimentibacter</i> sp. and <i>Coprococcus</i> sp., were higher in the soil from agricultural
fields than from abandoned fields. Our approach could characterize
soil activity based on the metabolic dynamics of microbial communities
in the biomass degradation process and should therefore be useful
in future investigations of the environmental effects of natural disasters
on soils