| Literature DB >> 27701448 |
Elahe Kia1, Brett Wagner Mackenzie2, Danielle Middleton1, Anna Lau1, David W Waite1, Gillian Lewis1, Yih-Kai Chan1,3, Marta Silvestre1,3, Garth J S Cooper1, Sally D Poppitt1,3, Michael W Taylor1.
Abstract
In studies of the human microbiome, faecal samples are frequently used as a non-invasive proxy for the study of the intestinal microbiota. To obtain reliable insights, the need for bacterial DNA of high quality and integrity following appropriate faecal sample collection and preservation steps is paramount. In a study of dietary mineral balance in the context of type 2 diabetes (T2D), faecal samples were collected from healthy and T2D individuals throughout a 13-day residential trial. These samples were freeze-dried, then stored mostly at -20°C from the trial date in 2000/2001 until the current research in 2014. Given the relative antiquity of these samples (~14 years), we sought to evaluate DNA quality and comparability to freshly collected human faecal samples. Following the extraction of bacterial DNA, gel electrophoresis indicated that our DNA extracts were more sheared than extracts made from freshly collected faecal samples, but still of sufficiently high molecular weight to support amplicon-based studies. Likewise, spectrophotometric assessment of extracts revealed that they were of high quality and quantity. A subset of bacterial 16S rRNA gene amplicons were sequenced using Illumina MiSeq and compared against publicly available sequence data representing a similar cohort analysed by the American Gut Project (AGP). Notably, our bacterial community profiles were highly consistent with those from the AGP data. Our results suggest that when faecal specimens are stored appropriately, the microbial profiles are preserved and robust to extended storage periods.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27701448 PMCID: PMC5049846 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0163666
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Agarose gel electrophoresis image showing representative DNA extracts obtained from the freeze-dried faecal samples of Cooper et al. [7].
DNA extracts from three “fresh” faecal samples are also included for comparison.
Fig 2Phylum-level comparison of bacterial community structure between the freeze-dried faecal samples from Cooper et al. [7] (labelled “This study”, n = 12) and a matched cohort of individuals from the American Gut Project (n = 110).
“Others” represent bacterial phyla which did not comprise >0.1% relative sequence abundance in multiple samples.
Fig 3Non-metric multidimensional scaling plot showing overlap in bacterial community structure between the freeze-dried faecal samples from Cooper et al. [7] (blue symbols, n = 12) and a matched cohort of individuals from the American Gut Project (open symbols, n = 110).
The weighted UniFrac metric was applied.