| Literature DB >> 27226242 |
Yong Guo1,2, Sheng-Hui Li1,2, Ya-Shu Kuang1,2, Jian-Rong He1,2, Jin-Hua Lu1,2, Bei-Jun Luo3, Feng-Ju Jiang3, Yao-Zhong Liu4, Christopher J Papasian5, Hui-Min Xia1,6, Hong-Wen Deng1,4, Xiu Qiu1,2.
Abstract
Sample storage conditions are important for unbiased analysis of microbial communities in metagenomic studies. Specifically, for infant gut microbiota studies, stool specimens are often exposed to room temperature (RT) conditions prior to analysis. This could lead to variations in structural and quantitative assessment of bacterial communities. To estimate such effects of RT storage, we collected feces from 29 healthy infants (0-3 months) and partitioned each sample into 5 portions to be stored for different lengths of time at RT before freezing at -80 °C. Alpha diversity did not differ between samples with storage time from 0 to 2 hours. The UniFrac distances and microbial composition analysis showed significant differences by testing among individuals, but not by testing between different time points at RT. Changes in the relative abundance of some specific (less common, minor) taxa were still found during storage at room temperature. Our results support previous studies in children and adults, and provided useful information for accurate characterization of infant gut microbiomes. In particular, our study furnished a solid foundation and justification for using fecal samples exposed to RT for less than 2 hours for comparative analyses between various medical conditions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27226242 PMCID: PMC4880902 DOI: 10.1038/srep26648
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1PCoA of the unweighted UniFrac distance as a measure of microbial community structure.
(a) Samples are grouped by the duration of room temperature storage, showing no clustering of samples in five different durations of storage at room temperature. (b) Samples are grouped by individuals, showing apparent separation between these individuals. Samples on the first and second principal coordinates are plotted by nodes. Lines connect samples in the same groups, and colored circles cover the samples near the center of gravity for each group.
Figure 2Heatmap representation of the fold change in the relative abundance of genera for all individuals.
For each individual, samples stored at room temperature for 15 min, 30 min, 1 h and 2 h are compared with time 0 (frozen immediately). Shades of red and green represent an increase or decrease, respectively, in the relative abundance. Values greater than 2-fold were grouped. To reduce sequencing errors, genera with mean relative abundances <1% at all five time points were removed from analysis. Unclassified genera under a higher taxon (usually at family level) are marked by asterisks. Detailed changes in the relative abundance of genera for all individuals are shown in Fig. S4.
Figure 3Fold change in the relative abundance of various genera with storage at room temperature.
All genera with ≥2 fold increase (top) or decrease (down) after storage in RT for 1 or 2 hours are shown. Genera containing both increased and decreased occurrences were linked with a dotted line. The Y axis represents the fold change in relative abundance, and the X axis reflects different individuals (grouped by four colored bars which indicate the fold change at15 min, 30 min, 1 h and 2 h comparing the baseline). For each individual, genera with mean relative abundances <1% at all five time points were excluded from analysis.