| Literature DB >> 29026445 |
Varun Aggarwala1, Guanxiang Liang1,2, Frederic D Bushman1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The numerically most abundant biological entities on Earth are viruses. Vast populations prey on the cellular microbiota in all habitats, including the human gut. MAIN BODY: Here we review approaches for studying the human virome, and some recent results on movement of viral sequences between bacterial cells and eukaryotic hosts. We first overview biochemical and bioinformatic methods, emphasizing that specific choices in the methods used can have strong effects on the results obtained. We then review studies characterizing the virome of the healthy human gut, which reveal that most of the viruses detected are typically uncharacterized phage - the viral dark matter - and that viruses that infect human cells are encountered only rarely. We then review movement of phage between bacterial cells during antibiotic treatment. Here a radical proposal for extensive movement of antibiotic genes on phage has been challenged by a careful reanalysis of the metagenomic annotation methods used. We then review two recent studies of movement of whole phage communities between human individuals during fecal microbial transplantation, which emphasize the possible role of lysogeny in dispersal. SHORTEntities:
Keywords: Bacteriophage; DNA; Metagenomics; Microbiome; Transduction; Virome; Virus
Year: 2017 PMID: 29026445 PMCID: PMC5627405 DOI: 10.1186/s13100-017-0095-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mob DNA
Fig. 1Illustration of the viral dark matter problem. Percentage of unmapped reads or contigs in several viral purified sequencing studies and on 849 viral purified sequencing datasets collected locally at University of Pennsylvania
Methods for purifying VLPs
| VLPs isolation steps | Methods | Pros | Cons | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starting material amount | 0.5 ~ 5 g | Recovery of low abundant viruses | Long processing time; Difficult in filtration with high mucus samples (such as meconium) | [ |
| 0.1 ~ 0.3 g | Simple and quick | Lost of low abundant viruses | [ | |
| Suspension buffer | SM buffer | Long-term storage of viruses | [ | |
| PBS buffer | [ | |||
| Filtration pore size | 0.20 μm | Better efficiency of removing host and other microbial cells | Lost of viruses larger than 0.20 μm | [ |
| 0.45 μm | Recovery of viruses larger than 0.20 μm | Less efficiency of removing host and other microbial cells | [ | |
| 0.45 μm filtration followed by 0.20 μm filtration | [ | |||
| VLPs enrichment | Centricon Centrifugal Filter | Simple and quick | Proteins from host or other microbial cells cannot be filtered | [ |
| CsCl density gradient centrifugation | Better efficiency of removing host and other microbial cells | Long processing time; Limited number of samples that can be processed in parallel | [ | |
| Further purification | Usage of chloroform | Better efficiency of removing host and other microbial cells | Lost of enveloped viruses | [ |
| No chloroform | Recovery of enveloped viruses | Less efficiency of removing host and other microbial cells | [ |
Fig. 2Bioinformatic approaches for analyzing the virome sequencing data. The left panel describes the steps in the analysis of the data, while the right panel lists some commonly used tools for performing the corresponding step on the left