Literature DB >> 25550518

Tracking heavy water (D2O) incorporation for identifying and sorting active microbial cells.

David Berry1, Esther Mader1, Tae Kwon Lee1, Dagmar Woebken1, Yun Wang2, Di Zhu3, Marton Palatinszky1, Arno Schintlmeister4, Markus C Schmid1, Buck T Hanson1, Naama Shterzer5, Itzhak Mizrahi5, Isabella Rauch6, Thomas Decker6, Thomas Bocklitz7, Jürgen Popp8, Christopher M Gibson9, Patrick W Fowler9, Wei E Huang10, Michael Wagner11.   

Abstract

Microbial communities are essential to the function of virtually all ecosystems and eukaryotes, including humans. However, it is still a major challenge to identify microbial cells active under natural conditions in complex systems. In this study, we developed a new method to identify and sort active microbes on the single-cell level in complex samples using stable isotope probing with heavy water (D2O) combined with Raman microspectroscopy. Incorporation of D2O-derived D into the biomass of autotrophic and heterotrophic bacteria and archaea could be unambiguously detected via C-D signature peaks in single-cell Raman spectra, and the obtained labeling pattern was confirmed by nanoscale-resolution secondary ion MS. In fast-growing Escherichia coli cells, label detection was already possible after 20 min. For functional analyses of microbial communities, the detection of D incorporation from D2O in individual microbial cells via Raman microspectroscopy can be directly combined with FISH for the identification of active microbes. Applying this approach to mouse cecal microbiota revealed that the host-compound foragers Akkermansia muciniphila and Bacteroides acidifaciens exhibited distinctive response patterns to amendments of mucin and sugars. By Raman-based cell sorting of active (deuterated) cells with optical tweezers and subsequent multiple displacement amplification and DNA sequencing, novel cecal microbes stimulated by mucin and/or glucosamine were identified, demonstrating the potential of the nondestructive D2O-Raman approach for targeted sorting of microbial cells with defined functional properties for single-cell genomics.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Raman microspectroscopy; carbohydrate utilization; ecophysiology; nitrifier; single-cell microbiology

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25550518      PMCID: PMC4299247          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1420406112

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  91 in total

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