| Literature DB >> 27572971 |
Claudio Donati1, Moreno Zolfo2, Davide Albanese1, Duy Tin Truong2, Francesco Asnicar2, Valerio Iebba3, Duccio Cavalieri4,5, Olivier Jousson2, Carlotta De Filippo5, Curtis Huttenhower6,7, Nicola Segata2.
Abstract
Microbial epidemiology and population genomics have previously been carried out near-exclusively for organisms grown in vitro. Metagenomics helps to overcome this limitation, but it is still challenging to achieve strain-level characterization of microorganisms from culture-independent data with sufficient resolution for epidemiological modelling. Here, we have developed multiple complementary approaches that can be combined to profile and track individual microbial strains. To specifically profile highly recombinant neisseriae from oral metagenomes, we integrated four metagenomic analysis techniques: single nucleotide polymorphisms in the clade's core genome, DNA uptake sequence signatures, metagenomic multilocus sequence typing and strain-specific marker genes. We applied these tools to 520 oral metagenomes from the Human Microbiome Project, finding evidence of site tropism and temporal intra-subject strain retention. Although the opportunistic pathogen Neisseria meningitidis is enriched for colonization in the throat, N. flavescens and N. subflava populate the tongue dorsum, and N. sicca, N. mucosa and N. elongata the gingival plaque. The buccal mucosa appeared as an intermediate ecological niche between the plaque and the tongue. The resulting approaches to metagenomic strain profiling are generalizable and can be extended to other organisms and microbiomes across environments.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27572971 DOI: 10.1038/nmicrobiol.2016.70
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Microbiol ISSN: 2058-5276 Impact factor: 17.745