Bacterial diversity in the rice rhizosphere at different rice
growth stages, managed under conventional and no-tillage
practices, was explored using a culture-based approach.
Actinobacteria are among the bacterial phyla abundant in
the rice rhizosphere. Their diversity was further examined by
constructing metagenomic libraries based on the 16S rRNA
gene, using actinobacterial- and streptomycete-specific polymerase
chain reaction (PCR) primers. The study included
132 culturable strains and 125 clones from the 16S rRNA gene
libraries. In conventional tillage, there were 38% Proteobacteria,
22% Actinobacteria, 33% Firmicutes, 5% Bacteroidetes,
and 2% Acidobacteria, whereas with no-tillage management
there were 63% Proteobacteria, 24% Actinobacteria, 6% Firmicutes,
and 8% Bacteroidetes as estimated using the culturedependent
method
during the four stages of rice cultivation.
Principal coordinates analysis was used to cluster the bacterial
communities along axes of maximal variance. The different
growth stages of rice appeared to influence the rhizosphere
bacterial profile for both cultivation practices. Novel
clones with low similarities (89–97%) to Actinobacteria and
Streptomyces were retrieved from both rice fields by screening
the 16S rRNA gene libraries using actinobacterial- and
streptomycete-specific primers. By comparing the actinobacterial
community retrieved by culture-dependent and
molecular methods, it was clear that a more comprehensive
assessment of microbial diversity in the rice rhizosphere can
be obtained using a combination of both techniques than
by using either method alone. We also succeeded in culturing
a number of bacteria that were previously described as
unculturable. These were in a phylogenetically deep lineage when compared with related cultivable genera.