| Literature DB >> 26024217 |
Danyta I Tedjo1, Daisy M A E Jonkers2, Paul H Savelkoul3, Ad A Masclee2, Niels van Best3, Marieke J Pierik2, John Penders4.
Abstract
Large-scale cohort studies are currently being designed to investigate the human microbiome in health and disease. Adequate sampling strategies are required to limit bias due to shifts in microbial communities during sampling and storage. Therefore, we examined the impact of different sampling and storage conditions on the stability of fecal microbial communities in healthy and diseased subjects. Fecal samples from 10 healthy controls, 10 irritable bowel syndrome and 8 inflammatory bowel disease patients were collected on site, aliquoted immediately after defecation and stored at -80 °C, -20 °C for 1 week, at +4°C or room temperature for 24 hours. Fecal transport swabs (FecalSwab, Copan) were collected and stored for 48-72 hours at room temperature. We used pyrosequencing of the 16S gene to investigate the stability of microbial communities. Alpha diversity did not differ between all storage methods and -80 °C, except for the fecal swabs. UPGMA clustering and principal coordinate analysis showed significant clustering by test subject (p < 0.001) but not by storage method. Bray-Curtis dissimilarity and (un)weighted UniFrac showed a significant higher distance between fecal swabs and -80 °C versus the other methods and -80 °C samples (p < 0.009). The relative abundance of Ruminococcus and Enterobacteriaceae did not differ between the storage methods versus -80 °C, but was higher in fecal swabs (p < 0.05). Storage up to 24 hours (at +4 °C or room temperature) or freezing at -20 °C did not significantly alter the fecal microbial community structure compared to direct freezing of samples from healthy subjects and patients with gastrointestinal disorders.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26024217 PMCID: PMC4449036 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0126685
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of study population.
| HC (n = 10) | IBS (n = 10) | IBD (n = 8) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 25.5 (23–44) | 51.5 (23–71) | 55.5 (20–67) |
| Male (%) | 60 | 60 | 37.5 |
| BMI | 21.3 (19.2–24.8) | 23.8 (18.1–34.7) | 27.6 (35.3–22.7) |
| Smoker (%): | |||
| - Currently | 0 | 20 | 0 |
| - Stopped | 10 | 10 | 50 |
| - Never | 90 | 70 | 50 |
| Stool consistency | |||
| - Type 1–2 | 0 | 3 | 0 |
| - Type 3–4 | 10 | 3 | 0 |
| - Type 5–7 | 0 | 4 | 8 |
| Disease phenotype | n.a. | IBS-D: 5 | 4 CD |
| IBS-C: 1 | 4 UC | ||
| IBS-M: 4 | |||
| Disease location | n.a. | n.a. | colonic: 1 left sided:3 ileocolonic: 2 pancolitis:1 |
| Medication (n) | 3 | 8 | 9 |
| Birth control: 2 | Birth control: 2 | TNF-α: 3 | |
| Ironsupplement and asthma medication:1 | Motility: 3 | Thiopurine: 2 | |
| Antidepressant: 4 | Aminosalicylate: 2 | ||
| PPI: 1 | Methotrexate | ||
| Analgesics: 3 | Glucocorticoid: 6 | ||
| Antibiotics: 2 | |||
| Abdominal surgery | 0 | 4 | 2 |
| Active disease | n.a. | n.a. | CD: 4/4 UC: 3/4 |
Continuous variables are presented as median and range.
1: CD: Crohn’s disease, UC: ulcerative colitis, IBS-D: diarrhea predominant IBS, IBS-C: constipation predominant IBS, IBS-M: mixed IBS
2: Patients took multiple medications.
3: 2 subjects had a hysterectomy, 1 subject had a sigmoid resection, 1 subject underwent an appendectomy
4: 1 subject had a hysterectomy, 1 subject had a hysterectomy, appendectomy and illeocecal resection
5: Active disease if Harvey-Bradshaw Index (HBI)>4 (CD) or Simple Clinical Colitis Activity Index (SCCAI)>3 (UC)
6: Type 1–2: Type 1–2: hard/lumpy stool. Type 3–4: sausage shaped stool (with cracks or being smooth/soft). Type 5–7: soft blobs to watery/liquid consistency
Fig 1Relative distribution of bacterial taxa at genus level per storage or sampling method for a representative set of test subjects (2 healthy controls, 2 IBS and 2 IBD patients).
Letters indicate the storage method (A = -80°C, B = 1wk -20°C, C = 24h +4°C, D = 24h RT, E = FecalSwab).
Fig 2Effect of storage methods on the alpha diversity.
Chao 1 richness estimate (a) and Shannon index (b) is shown at the y axis and test subjects are shown at the x axis. The blue, green and red bands indicate healthy test subjects, IBS and IBD patients respectively. Only test subjects (17/28) with a complete set of samples (5 different sampling and storage methods) available for analysis are shown. *p<0.01 compared with -80°C as determined by the wilcoxon signed rank test.
Effect of sampling and storage methods on alpha diversity metrics.
|
| Sampling & storage methods | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| -80°C (n = 28) | 1w -20°C (n = 27) | 24h RT (n = 28) | 24h +4°C (n = 28) | 48–72h FecalSwab (n = 18) | |
|
| 540.1 (112.5–811.2) | 545.5 (93.8–995.9) | 549.2 (95.3–830.6) | 529.1 (90.6–791.4) | 593.9* (280.8–746.9) |
|
| 955.8 (206.0–1457.3) | 935.2 (143.6–1780.6) | 963.8 (180.1–1525.6) | 936.36 (130.1–1440.3) | 1042,62* (544.4–1308.4) |
|
| 7.0 (4.4–8.4) | 6.9 (4.1–8.7) | 7.0 (4.1–8.4) | 6.9 (4.4–8.5) | 7.4* (5.5–8.1) |
|
| 27.5 (8.6–37.3) | 27.5 (6.8–46.0) | 28.4 (7.8–37.7) | 27.6 (7.0–37.2) | 30.0* (14.5–37.3) |
Median and range are shown in the table. (*p<0.05 compared to -80°C).
Fig 3UPGMA tree based on unweighted UniFrac distance.
All subjects (n = 28) are included. Letters indicate the storage method (A = -80°C, B = 1wk -20°C, C = 24h +4°C, D = 24h RT, E = FecalSwab). Samples of healthy subjects (HC), IBS and IBD patients are written in blue, green and red, respectively.
Fig 4Box-and-whisker plot of unweighted UniFrac distance between reference method and other sampling and storage methods.
Whiskers express the maximum and minimum values. *indicate a significant difference (p<0.01).
Fig 5Fold change of relative abundance of Enterobacteriaceae (a) and Ruminococcus spp. (b) compared to -80°C.
Only test subjects (17/28) with a complete set of samples (5 different sampling and storage methods) available are shown. Fold changes are shown at the y axis (logarithmic scale). * Relative abundance in FecalSwabs was significantly higher as compared to reference storage method (p<0.05 as determined by Wilcoxon signed rank test).